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It is generally assumed that biting performance
trades off with suction performance in fish because both feeding types may
place conflicting demands on the cranial musculo-skeletal system. In this
study, suction feeding performance was compared between three clariid
catfish species differing considerably in their biting capacity, by
measuring the velocity of a standardized prey being sucked into the buccal
cavity using high-speed cineradiogaphy (see figure and video below).
As all species were able to accelerate the prey to similar peak
velocities, our results demonstrate the possibility for catfishes to
increase bite performance considerably without compromising in suction
performance. More information is found in the following article
Van Wassenbergh S.,
Herrel A., Adriaens, D. and Aerts P. (2007) No
trade-off between biting and suction feeding performance in clariid
catfishes. J. Exp. Biol. 210: 27-36. full
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