Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2790970 Zoology 2016 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We investigated the role of undulation frequency in burial in five species of flatfishes.•Increased undulation frequency resulted in an increase in the area of sand coverage.•Undulations were sufficient to bury flatfish.•Shape and behavioral factors may contribute to flatfish burial.

Flatfishes bury themselves under a thin layer of sand to hide from predators or to ambush prey. We investigated the role of undulation frequency of the body in burial in five species of flatfishes (Isopsetta isolepis, Lepidopsetta bilineata, Hippoglossoides elassodon, Parophrys vetulus, and Psettichthys melanostictus). High-speed videos show that undulations begin cranially and pass caudally while burying, as in forward swimming in many other fishes. The flatfishes also flick the posterior edge of their dorsal and anal fins during burial, which may increase the total surface area covered by substrate. We built a simple physical model – a flexible, oval silicone plate with a motorized, variable-speed actuator – to isolate the effect of undulation frequency on burial. In both the model and actuated dead flatfish, increased undulation frequency resulted in an increase in the area of sand coverage. Complete coverage required an undulation frequency of no more than 10 Hz for our models, and that was also sufficient for live flatfishes. The model shows that undulation is sufficient to bury the animal, but live flatfishes showed a superior ability to bury, which we attribute to the action of the median fins.

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Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Animal Science and Zoology
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