EVOLUTION OF MOTOR PATTERNS IN TETRAODONTIFORM FISHES - DOES MUSCLE DUPLICATION LEAD TO FUNCTIONAL DIVERSIFICATION

Citation
Jp. Friel et Pc. Wainwright, EVOLUTION OF MOTOR PATTERNS IN TETRAODONTIFORM FISHES - DOES MUSCLE DUPLICATION LEAD TO FUNCTIONAL DIVERSIFICATION, Brain, behavior and evolution, 52(3), 1998, pp. 159-170
Citations number
44
Categorie Soggetti
Neurosciences,"Behavioral Sciences
ISSN journal
00068977
Volume
52
Issue
3
Year of publication
1998
Pages
159 - 170
Database
ISI
SICI code
0006-8977(1998)52:3<159:EOMPIT>2.0.ZU;2-#
Abstract
Several times within the teleost fish order Tetraodontiformes singular jaw adducting muscles have been effectively 'duplicated' by physical subdivision to produce new muscles. This morphological system provides an opportunity to investigate how the functional complexity of muscul ar systems changes with evolutionary increases in the number of compon ent muscles. In this study we asked if muscle duplication has lead to functional diversification by comparing the motor patterns of muscles that result from subdivision events. The activity patterns of five dif ferent sets of duplicated muscles were quantified with electromyograph ic recordings (EMG) from four individuals in each of three species dur ing processing of three prey types. Prey varied in durability and elus iveness (live fiddler crabs, pieces of squid tentacle and live paeneid shrimps). For each cycle of prey processing, measurements were made o f the relative onset time of each adductor muscle, the duration of eac h burst of activity, and the relative intensity of each activity burst . Two types of functional divergence of muscles were observed in analy ses of variance conducted on the EMG variables. In two of the 15 varia bles examined, the timing of activity of the descendant set of muscles differed. In another three of the 15 variables, there were significan t interactions between muscle and prey type, indicating a prey effect which differed in the descendant muscles. Overall, evidence of motor d ivergence was found in three of five cases of muscle duplication. This indicates that muscle subdivision has led to increased functional com plexity of the jaw-adductor muscle system in tetraodontiform fishes.