To capture prey by suction, fish generate a flow of water that enters the mouth, and exits at the back of the head. It was previously hypothesized prey-capture performance is improved by a streamlined shape of the posterior region of the pharynx, which enables an unobstructed outflow with minimal hydrodynamic resistance. However, this hypothesis remained untested for several decades. Using computational fluid dynamics simulations, we now managed to quantify the effects of different shapes of the posterior pharynx on the dynamics of suction feeding, based on a feeding act of a sunfish (Lepomis gibbosus). In contrast to what was hypothesized, the effects of the imposed variation in shape were negligible: flow velocity patterns remained essent...
Abstract The majority of aquatic vertebrates are suction feeders: by rapidly expanding the mouth cav...
Few vertebrates capture prey in both the aquatic and the terrestrial environment due to the conflict...
During the evolutionary transition from fish to tetrapods, a shift from uni- to bidirectional suctio...
To capture prey by suction, fish generate a flow of water that enters the mouth, and exits at the ba...
Suction feeding is pervasive among aquatic vertebrates, and our understanding of the fun...
<p/>1. Suction feeding is the dominant way to obtain food in teleosts. Its high demands on str...
Values of pressure, velocity, wall shear and forces for the four static, rotationally symmetric, uns...
To capture and swallow food on land, a sticky tongue supported by the hyoid and gill arch skeleton h...
Presumably as an adaptation for mouthbrooding, many cichlid fish species have evolved a prominent se...
Synopsis Despite almost 50 years of research on the functional morphology and biomechanics of suctio...
<p/>In this thesis hydrodynamic principles are used to quantify relations between form and fun...
Synopsis Despite almost 50 years of research on the functional morphology and biomechanics of suctio...
Functional innovations are often invoked to explain the uneven distribution of ecological diversity....
Prey capture is critical for survival, and differences in correctly positioning and timing a strike ...
S u m m a r y Seahorses give birth to juveniles having a fully functional feeding apparatus, and juv...
Abstract The majority of aquatic vertebrates are suction feeders: by rapidly expanding the mouth cav...
Few vertebrates capture prey in both the aquatic and the terrestrial environment due to the conflict...
During the evolutionary transition from fish to tetrapods, a shift from uni- to bidirectional suctio...
To capture prey by suction, fish generate a flow of water that enters the mouth, and exits at the ba...
Suction feeding is pervasive among aquatic vertebrates, and our understanding of the fun...
<p/>1. Suction feeding is the dominant way to obtain food in teleosts. Its high demands on str...
Values of pressure, velocity, wall shear and forces for the four static, rotationally symmetric, uns...
To capture and swallow food on land, a sticky tongue supported by the hyoid and gill arch skeleton h...
Presumably as an adaptation for mouthbrooding, many cichlid fish species have evolved a prominent se...
Synopsis Despite almost 50 years of research on the functional morphology and biomechanics of suctio...
<p/>In this thesis hydrodynamic principles are used to quantify relations between form and fun...
Synopsis Despite almost 50 years of research on the functional morphology and biomechanics of suctio...
Functional innovations are often invoked to explain the uneven distribution of ecological diversity....
Prey capture is critical for survival, and differences in correctly positioning and timing a strike ...
S u m m a r y Seahorses give birth to juveniles having a fully functional feeding apparatus, and juv...
Abstract The majority of aquatic vertebrates are suction feeders: by rapidly expanding the mouth cav...
Few vertebrates capture prey in both the aquatic and the terrestrial environment due to the conflict...
During the evolutionary transition from fish to tetrapods, a shift from uni- to bidirectional suctio...