5 September 2007; | doi:10.1038/news070903-11
Eels [anguille] imitate Alien
Fearsome [redoutable] fish have protruding [avancer] jaws in their throats to grab prey.Michael Hopkin


| A moray eel's second jaws lie in wait (top) before snapping out to help catch prey (bottom). Click here to watch a video. |
|
Researchers
studying one species of moray eels have uncovered a deadly secret that
helps the snake-like fish to swallow their prey. Like the fearsome
extraterrestrial from the sci-fi horror classic
Alien, these
real-life beasts have a second, extendable pair of jaws - encrusted
with sharp teeth - that thrusts forward to ensnare hapless fish and
shrimp.
High-speed
videos
and X-ray photos (above) show how the second jaws, called pharyngeal
jaws, lie in wait inside the throat, and then extend forwards into the
mouth to grab prey that has been captured by the eel's main teeth. The
morsel is then drawn into the eel's oesophagus.
This helps the eels (
Muraena retifera)
to be deadly hunters, despite the fact that, unlike many other
predatory fish, they cannot generate strong suction forces inside the
mouth cavity to capture a meal. Zoologists had previously been puzzled
as to how moray eels, which live on coral reefs and rocky shorelines
all over the world, keep hold of their prey long enough to swallow it.
Unlike
Sigourney Weaver's big-screen nemesis, these moray eels cannot extend
their second set of jaws out beyond their first. But the ability to
deliver not one but two bites is still a potent weapon in helping the
eels feed, say Rita Mehta and Peter Wainwright of the University of
California, Davis, who made the discovery.
"Eels
are well respected and often feared by fishermen for their sharp teeth,
but I think their true claim to fame may be their pharyngeal jaws,"
comments Mark Westneat of the Field Museum of Natural History in
Chicago.
Bit between the teethMany
fish species have extra jaws in their throats, which can function to
filter food from water or to grind prey when swallowing. But the eel's
extendable jaws are the first throat jaws known to be adapted to help
catch prey, rather than simply to help swallow it, the researchers
explain in
Nature this week.
"It's
so exciting because this is another example of the diversity you can
see in vertebrates," says Mehta. "This is a really amazing innovation."
The trick also adds to the remarkable similarity between
eels and snakes, despite the fact that they are from completely
different realms of the animal kingdom. The researchers point out that
the eel's double bite, which grabs prey before it gets away, can be
compared to the ratcheting process by which snakes gradually swallow
huge prey items in distinct stages.
Westneat
says the discovery harks back to an age when scientists discovered
natural phenomena, rather than developing theories and testing them. He
calls it "a classic example of discovery-based science, stemming from a
'wow' moment".
Reference : Mehta, R. S. & Wainwright, P. C. Nature
449,
79-82
(2007).
Méfiez-vous de la double mâchoire de la murène
Par Jean-Luc Goudet - Futura-Sciences
Au fond de sa gorge, la murène dispose d'une redoutable seconde mâchoire qui entraîne ses proies vers le tube digestif. Elle a été observée en action grâce à des caméras ultrarapides et aux rayons X. Attention, âmes sensibles, passez votre chemin...
http://www.futura-sciences.com/fr/sinformer/actualites/news/t/zoologie/d/mefiez-vous-de-la-double-machoire-de-la-murene_12843/