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      Testing the effects of body depth on fish maneuverability via robophysical models

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      Bioinspiration & Biomimetics
      IOP Publishing

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          Abstract

          Fish show a wide diversity of body shapes which affect many aspects of their biology, including swimming and feeding performance, and defense from predators. Deep laterally compressed bodies are particularly common, and have evolved multiple times in different families. Functional hypotheses that explain these trends include predator defense and increased maneuverability. While there is strong evidence that increasing body depth helps fish avoid gape-limited predators, the evidence that body shape increases a fish’s maneuverability is ambiguous. We used a two-pronged approach to explore the effects of body shape on the control of maneuvers using both live fish and a robotic model that allowed us to independently vary body shape. We captured ventral video of two tetra species ( Gymnocorymbus ternetzi and Aphyocharax anisitsi) performing a wide range of maneuvers to confirm that both species of live fish utilize fundamentally similar body deformations to execute a turn, despite their different body depths. Both species use a propagating ‘pulse’ of midline curvature that is qualitatively similar to prior studies and displayed similar trends in the relationships between body kinematics and performance. We then tested the robotic model’s maneuverability, defined as the total heading change and maximum centripetal acceleration generated during a single pulse, at a range of different input kinematics across three body shapes. We found that deepening bodies increase the robot’s ability to change direction and centripetal acceleration, though centripetal acceleration exhibits diminishing returns beyond a certain body depth. By using a robotic model, we were able to isolate the effects of body shape on maneuverability and clarify this confounded relationship. Studying the functional morphology of complex traits such as body shape and their interaction with complex behavior like maneuverability benefits from both the broad view provided by comprehensive comparative studies, and the control of variables enabled by robophysical experiments.

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          Phylogenies and the Comparative Method

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            Why Not to Do Two-Species Comparative Studies: Limitations on Inferring Adaptation

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              Is Open Access

              A Morphospace for Reef Fishes: Elongation Is the Dominant Axis of Body Shape Evolution

              Tropical reef fishes are widely regarded as being perhaps the most morphologically diverse vertebrate assemblage on earth, yet much remains to be discovered about the scope and patterns of this diversity. We created a morphospace of 2,939 species spanning 56 families of tropical Indo-Pacific reef fishes and established the primary axes of body shape variation, the phylogenetic consistency of these patterns, and whether dominant patterns of shape change can be accomplished by diverse underlying changes. Principal component analysis showed a major axis of shape variation that contrasts deep-bodied species with slender, elongate forms. Furthermore, using custom methods to compare the elongation vector (axis that maximizes elongation deformation) and the main vector of shape variation (first principal component) for each family in the morphospace, we showed that two thirds of the families diversify along an axis of body elongation. Finally, a comparative analysis using a principal coordinate analysis based on the angles among first principal component vectors of each family shape showed that families accomplish changes in elongation with a wide range of underlying modifications. Some groups such as Pomacentridae and Lethrinidae undergo decreases in body depth with proportional increases in all body regions, while other families show disproportionate changes in the length of the head (e.g., Labridae), the trunk or caudal region in all combinations (e.g., Pempheridae and Pinguipedidae). In conclusion, we found that evolutionary changes in body shape along an axis of elongation dominates diversification in reef fishes. Changes in shape on this axis are thought to have immediate implications for swimming performance, defense from gape limited predators, suction feeding performance and access to some highly specialized habitats. The morphological modifications that underlie changes in elongation are highly diverse, suggesting a role for a range of developmental processes and functional consequences.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Bioinspiration & Biomimetics
                Bioinspir. Biomim.
                IOP Publishing
                1748-3182
                1748-3190
                November 29 2021
                January 01 2022
                November 29 2021
                January 01 2022
                : 17
                : 1
                : 016002
                Article
                10.1088/1748-3190/ac33c1
                b26bbfca-2a4d-4ad1-82f8-cdae15481f29
                © 2022

                https://iopscience.iop.org/page/copyright

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