Functional changes in the anatomy of the pharyngeal jaw apparatus of Astatoreochromis alluaudi (Pisces, Cichlidae), and their effects on adjacent structures
1996
Smits, J.D. | Witte, F. | Veen, F.G.
Organisms are tightly packed with structures so architectonic interdependency of structures is an obvious aspect of integration. This aspect of functional morphology, however, has received remarkably little attention. The present paper presents an example of the spatial relations among several apparatuses in the head of the cichlid fish, Astatoreochromis alluaudi. It investigates the transformations of these apparatuses and their functions due to a change in the pharyngeal jaw apparatus resulting from a functional shift (insect eating to snail crushing or vice versa). The volume of the pharyngeal jaw apparatus differs 55% between the insect eating- and the snail eating morph. The increase in volume of the pharyngeal jaw apparatus has an impressive number of spatial effects, both direct and indirect, on other structures. Reallocation of space within the pharyngeal jaw apparatus occurs. Total head volume increases 31% but a reallocation of space is still necessary as the increase of the opercular compartment where the pharyngeal jaw apparatus is situated compensates for only 59% of the volume increase of that. Not all spatial effects do impose constraints. Spatial constraints are avoided when one of the apparatuses can use a topographically different volume of space. The respiratory apparatus shows internal reallocations of space without loss of total volume. The same solution occurs for elements of the expansion apparatus and the buccal savity. The eyes are not influenced. Finally spatial effects can have positive repercussions. The muscles of the oral jaw apparatus increase in size. This may be an example of an epiphenomenon.
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