Functional morphology of the pharyngeal teeth of the ocean sunfish, Mola mola

Author:

Flaum Benjamin1ORCID,Blumer Michael J.2,Dean Mason N.1ORCID,Ekstrom Laura J.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. City University of Hong Kong Kowloon Hong Kong

2. Institute of Clinical and Functional Anatomy Medical University Innsbruck Innsbruck Austria

3. Wheaton College Massachusetts Norton Massachusetts USA

Abstract

AbstractMany fish use a set of pharyngeal jaws in their throat to aid in prey capture and processing, particularly of large or complex prey. In this study—combining dissection, CT scanning, histology, and performance testing—we demonstrate a novel use of pharyngeal teeth in the ocean sunfish (Mola mola), a species for which pharyngeal jaw anatomy had not been described. We show that sunfish possesses only dorsal pharyngeal jaws where, in contrast to their beaklike oral teeth, teeth are recurved spikes, arranged in three loosely connected rows. Fang‐like pharyngeal teeth were tightly socketed in the skeletal tissue, with shorter, incompletely‐formed teeth erupting between, suggesting tooth replacement. Trichrome staining revealed teeth anchored into their sockets via a combination of collagen bundles originating from the jaw connective tissue and mineralized trabeculae extending from the teeth bases. In resting position, teeth are nearly covered by soft tissue; however, manipulation of a straplike muscle, running transversely on the dorsal jaw face, everted teeth like a cat's claws. Adult sunfish suction feed almost exclusively on gelatinous prey (e.g., jellyfish) and have been observed to jet water during feeding and other activities; flume experiments simulating jetting behavior demonstrated adult teeth caught simulated gelatinous prey with 70%–100% success, with the teeth immobile in their sockets, even at 50x the jetting force, demonstrating high safety factor. We propose that sunfish pharyngeal teeth function as an efficient retention cage for mechanically challenging prey, a curious evolutionary convergence with the throat spikes of divergent taxa that employ spitting and jetting.

Publisher

Wiley

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