Novel muscle and connective tissue design enables high extensibility and controls engulfment volume in lunge-feeding rorqual whales

Author:

Shadwick Robert E.1,Goldbogen Jeremy A.2,Potvin Jean3,Pyenson Nicholas D.4,Vogl Wayne1

Affiliation:

1. University of British Columbia;

2. Cascadia Research Collective;

3. St. Louis University;

4. Smithsonian Institution

Abstract

Summary Muscle serves a wide variety of mechanical functions during animal feeding and locomotion, but the performance of this tissue is limited by how far it can be extended. In rorqual whales, feeding and locomotion are integrated in a dynamic process called lunge-feeding where an enormous volume of prey-laden water is engulfed into a capacious ventral oropharyngeal cavity that is bounded superficially by skeletal muscle and ventral grooved blubber (VGB). The great expansion of the cavity wall presents a mechanical challenge for the physiological limits of skeletal muscle, yet its role is considered fundamental in controlling the flux of water into the mouth. Our analyses of the functional properties and mechanical behavior of VGB muscles revealed a crimped microstructure in an unstrained, non-feeding state that is arranged in parallel with dense and straight elastin fibers. This allows the muscles to accommodate large tissue deformations of the VGB yet still operate within the known strain limits of vertebrate skeletal muscle. VGB transverse strains in routine-feeding rorquals were substantially less than those observed in dead ones, where decomposition gas stretched the VGB to its elastic limit, evidence supporting the idea that eccentric muscle contraction modulates the rate of expansion and ultimate size of the ventral cavity during engulfment.

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Insect Science,Molecular Biology,Animal Science and Zoology,Aquatic Science,Physiology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference35 articles.

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2. Myotomal muscle function at different locations in the body of a swimming fish;Altringham;J. Exp. Biol.,1993

3. Gulping behaviour in rorqual whales: underwater observations and functional interpretation;Arnold;Mem. Queensland Museum,2005

4. Dynamics of leg muscle function in tammar wallabies (M. eugenii) during level versus incline hopping;Biewener;J. Exp. Biol.,2004

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