How plecos breathe and stay "sucked on" at the same time
- MatsP
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How plecos breathe and stay "sucked on" at the same time
Geerinckx, T, A. Herrel & D. Adriaen. 2011. Suckermouth Armored Catfish Resolve the Paradox of Simultaneous Respiration and Suction Attachment. J. Exp. Zool. 315:121–131, 201
http://www.evomorph.ugent.be/Publications/Publ91.pdf
http://www.evomorph.ugent.be/Publications/Publ91.pdf
- corielover
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Re: How plecos breathe and stay "sucked on" at the same time
Wow, I never knew that! I always thought that they somehow breathed through their noses or something.
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- MatsP
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Re: How plecos breathe and stay "sucked on" at the same time
Considering that fish don't actually have a "nasal passage" in the same way humans (and all other mammals) do, it would be hard to achieve that.corielover wrote:Wow, I never knew that! I always thought that they somehow breathed through their noses or something.
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Mats
- corielover
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Re: How plecos breathe and stay "sucked on" at the same time
I guess not having a nose would make it hard to breath through one. Silly me.
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Re: How plecos breathe and stay "sucked on" at the same time
actually some fish did have a nasal passage, but those are extinct; the lobe-finned fishes of the Devonian period had them
it's no surprise that these fish are the ancestors of all backboned terrstrials
;)
great article, Mats!
saved it in my "fishy things" folder
about fish that use the mouth for sucking; it's fun to see the different solutions;
for example the Chinese algae eater (Gyrinocheilus aymonieri) has an extra opening on the top of the gill slit and it breathes both in and out through the gills when it's attached to something.
I am quite curious how for example African suckermouth cats (Euchilichthys, Chiloglanis) have solved this problem too...
it's no surprise that these fish are the ancestors of all backboned terrstrials
;)
great article, Mats!
saved it in my "fishy things" folder
about fish that use the mouth for sucking; it's fun to see the different solutions;
for example the Chinese algae eater (Gyrinocheilus aymonieri) has an extra opening on the top of the gill slit and it breathes both in and out through the gills when it's attached to something.
I am quite curious how for example African suckermouth cats (Euchilichthys, Chiloglanis) have solved this problem too...
Valar Morghulis