COMPARATIVE-ANALYSIS OF THE HEAD MORPHOLOGY OF PACIFIC TEMPERATE KYPHOSID FISHES - A MORPHOFUNCTIONAL APPROACH TO PREY-CAPTURE MECHANISMS
dc.contributor.author | VIAL, CI | |
dc.contributor.author | OJEDA, FP | |
dc.date.accessioned | 2025-01-23T19:21:59Z | |
dc.date.available | 2025-01-23T19:21:59Z | |
dc.date.issued | 1992 | |
dc.description.abstract | Vial & Ojeda (1990) proposed that the low diversity of herbivorous fishes observed among Percoids might be owing to the existence of morpho-functional restrictions of the feeding apparatus that hinder the acquisition of efficient mechanisms for cropping and ingesting plant material. The morphological and functional evidence presented therein for the herbivorous kyphoid Girella laevifrons indicates that its morphological specializations are related to structural decouplings of the anterior and posterior regions of the buccal cavity involving the jaw and the hyoid arch. Functionally, these decouplings allow the ingestion of algae in a continuous fashion at low energetic cost. In this study, we evaluate the general validity of the proposed model by means of a morphological and functional comparative analysis of the cephalic structures of the four most abundant Kyphosid species of the Chilean coast: the girellids Girella laevifrons (Tschudi), Girella albostriata Steindachner, and Graus nigra Philippi, and the scorpid Scorpis chilensis Guichenot. We found great osteological and myological similarities between the two strict herbivores, G. albostriata and G. laevifrons, thus suggesting that the mechanism previously described for the latter species corresponds very closely to that of the former. This mechanism provides for mandibular manipulation carried out independently by the upper jaw and for a decoupling of the lower jaw into two mechanical units. Graus and Scorpis display a somewhat different morphological design. Although both maintain the intrahyoid decoupling shared by all kyphosid species, they do not present mechanical independence between the upper and lower jaw, nor a capacity for intramandibular movements. In Graus, teeth are well developed, conical, and slightly curved toward the interior. These characteristics make possible a trophic mechanism primarily based on a strong biting especially well suited for carnivory. The structural plan of Scorpis appears more distant from species in the other two genera, althoug it shares with them characters such as the double tendon of the A1 muscle in the maxilla, the intrahyoid articulation, the type of teeth, their replacement system, and the general design of the suspensorium. The particular morphology of the adductor muscles, and the mandibular design of Scorpis suggest a trophic mechanism mainly based on a rapid suction. From a functional viewpoint, the structural differences encountered in the four species analyzed may be understood as modifications related to their different mechanisms of prey capture. | |
dc.fuente.origen | WOS | |
dc.identifier.issn | 0716-078X | |
dc.identifier.uri | https://repositorio.uc.cl/handle/11534/98925 | |
dc.identifier.wosid | WOS:A1992KH63700008 | |
dc.issue.numero | 4 | |
dc.language.iso | en | |
dc.pagina.final | 483 | |
dc.pagina.inicio | 471 | |
dc.revista | Revista chilena de historia natural | |
dc.rights | acceso restringido | |
dc.subject | KYPHOSIDAE | |
dc.subject | HERBIVORY | |
dc.subject | HEAD MORPHOLOGY | |
dc.subject | FEEDING APPARATUS | |
dc.subject | FUNCTIONAL DESIGN | |
dc.subject.ods | 14 Life Below Water | |
dc.subject.ods | 15 Life on Land | |
dc.subject.odspa | 14 Vida submarina | |
dc.subject.odspa | 15 Vida de ecosistemas terrestres | |
dc.title | COMPARATIVE-ANALYSIS OF THE HEAD MORPHOLOGY OF PACIFIC TEMPERATE KYPHOSID FISHES - A MORPHOFUNCTIONAL APPROACH TO PREY-CAPTURE MECHANISMS | |
dc.type | artículo | |
dc.volumen | 65 | |
sipa.index | WOS | |
sipa.trazabilidad | WOS;2025-01-12 |