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Fast-starting after a breath: air-breathing motions are kinematically similar to escape responses in the catfish Hoplosternum littorale. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Fast-starts, specifically C-start escape responses in fish, involve a rapid movement away from a threatening stimulus, typically characterized by the fish bending into a C-shape during the first contraction.
  • Recent observations suggest that these C-starts are not only used for escaping predators but also occur in air-breathing fish like Hoplosternum littorale when gulping air at the surface.
  • The study finds that the kinematics of air-gulping followed by a fast turn resemble escape responses, indicating that air-breathing might also serve to minimize the fish's exposure to predators by facilitating quick movement back to safer depths.

Article Abstract

Fast-starts are brief accelerations commonly observed in fish within the context of predator-prey interactions. In typical C-start escape responses, fish react to a threatening stimulus by bending their body into a C-shape during the first muscle contraction (i.e. stage 1) which provides a sudden acceleration away from the stimulus. Recently, similar C-starts have been recorded in fish aiming at a prey. Little is known about C-starts outside the context of predator-prey interactions, though recent work has shown that escape response can also be induced by high temperature. Here, we test the hypothesis that air-breathing fish may use C-starts in the context of gulping air at the surface. Hoplosternum littorale is an air-breathing freshwater catfish found in South America. Field video observations reveal that their air-breathing behaviour consists of air-gulping at the surface, followed by a fast turn which re-directs the fish towards the bottom. Using high-speed video in the laboratory, we compared the kinematics of the turn immediately following air-gulping performed by H. littorale in normoxia with those of mechanically-triggered C-start escape responses and with routine (i.e. spontaneous) turns. Our results show that air-breathing events overlap considerably with escape responses with a large stage 1 angle in terms of turning rates, distance covered and the relationship between these rates. Therefore, these two behaviours can be considered kinematically comparable, suggesting that air-breathing in this species is followed by escape-like C-start motions, presumably to minimise time at the surface and exposure to avian predators. These findings show that C-starts can occur in a variety of contexts in which fish may need to get away from areas of potential danger.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4295168PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/bio.20149332DOI Listing

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