4.5 Article

Performance and scaling of a novel locomotor structure: adhesive capacity of climbing gobiid fishes

期刊

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
卷 215, 期 22, 页码 3925-3936

出版社

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.072967

关键词

scaling; allometry; adhesion; locomotion; biomechanics; suction; fish

类别

资金

  1. National Science Foundation [IOS-0817911, IOS-0817794]
  2. St Cloud State University
  3. Clemson University Department of Biological Sciences
  4. Division Of Integrative Organismal Systems
  5. Direct For Biological Sciences [0817794, 0817911] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Many species of gobiid fishes adhere to surfaces using a sucker formed from fusion of the pelvic fins. Juveniles of many amphidromous species use this pelvic sucker to scale waterfalls during migrations to upstream habitats after an oceanic larval phase. However, adults may still use suckers to re-scale waterfalls if displaced. If attachment force is proportional to sucker area and if growth of the sucker is isometric, then increases in the forces that climbing fish must resist might outpace adhesive capacity, causing climbing performance to decline through ontogeny. To test for such trends, we measured pressure differentials and adhesive suction forces generated by the pelvic sucker across wide size ranges in six goby species, including climbing and non-climbing taxa. Suction was achieved via two distinct growth strategies: (1) small suckers with isometric (or negatively allometric) scaling among climbing gobies and (2) large suckers with positively allometric growth in non-climbing gobies. Species using the first strategy show a high baseline of adhesive capacity that may aid climbing performance throughout ontogeny, with pressure differentials and suction forces much greater than expected if adhesion were a passive function of sucker area. In contrast, large suckers possessed by non-climbing species may help compensate for reduced pressure differentials, thereby producing suction sufficient to support body weight. Climbing Sicyopterus species also use oral suckers during climbing waterfalls, and these exhibited scaling patterns similar to those for pelvic suckers. However, oral suction force was considerably lower than that for pelvic suckers, reducing the ability for these fish to attach to substrates by the oral sucker alone.

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