AI Article Synopsis

  • Trait-based approaches enhance our understanding of ecosystems by analyzing species' functional traits, but often lack strong empirical backing, especially regarding digestion and nutrient assimilation in fishes.
  • In a study of 142 fish species from 31 families in French Polynesia, researchers found that evolutionary history, body shape, and diet influence intestinal morphology more than length alone.
  • The study revealed that stomachless, durophagous fish develop wider intestines to process larger food particles, suggesting that intestinal surface area is a more relevant metric for studying intestinal functions than just length.

Article Abstract

Trait-based approaches are increasingly used to study species assemblages and understand ecosystem functioning. The strength of these approaches lies in the appropriate choice of functional traits that relate to the functions of interest. However, trait-function relationships are often supported by weak empirical evidence.Processes related to digestion and nutrient assimilation are particularly challenging to integrate into trait-based approaches. In fishes, intestinal length is commonly used to describe these functions. Although there is broad consensus concerning the relationship between fish intestinal length and diet, evolutionary and environmental forces have shaped a diversity of intestinal morphologies that is not captured by length alone.Focusing on coral reef fishes, we investigate how evolutionary history and ecology shape intestinal morphology. Using a large dataset encompassing 142 species across 31 families collected in French Polynesia, we test how phylogeny, body morphology, and diet relate to three intestinal morphological traits: intestinal length, diameter, and surface area.We demonstrate that phylogeny, body morphology, and trophic level explain most of the interspecific variability in fish intestinal morphology. Despite the high degree of phylogenetic conservatism, taxonomically unrelated herbivorous fishes exhibit similar intestinal morphology due to adaptive convergent evolution. Furthermore, we show that stomachless, durophagous species have the widest intestines to compensate for the lack of a stomach and allow passage of relatively large undigested food particles.Rather than traditionally applied metrics of intestinal length, intestinal surface area may be the most appropriate trait to characterize intestinal morphology in functional studies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8495780PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.8045DOI Listing

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