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Many ways to build an angler: diversity of feeding morphologies in a deep-sea evolutionary radiation

Many ways to build an angler: diversity of feeding morphologies in a deep-sea evolutionary radiation
Many ways to build an angler: diversity of feeding morphologies in a deep-sea evolutionary radiation
Almost nothing is known about the diets of bathypelagic fishes, but functional morphology can provide useful tools to infer ecological processes. Here we quantify variation in jaw and tooth morphologies across anglerfishes (Lophiiformes), a clade spanning shallow and deep-sea habitats. Deep-sea ceratioid anglerfishes are believed to be dietary generalists due to the presumed necessity of opportunistic feeding in the food-limited bathypelagic zone. However, we found unexpected diversity in the trophic morphologies of ceratioid anglerfishes. Ceratioid jaws span a functional continuum ranging from species with numerous stout teeth, a relatively slow but forceful bite, and high jaw protrusibility at one extreme (characteristics shared with benthic anglerfishes), to species with large fang-like teeth, a fast but weak bite, and low jaw protrusibility at the other (including a unique "wolftrap" phenotype). Our finding of high morphological diversity seems to be at odds with ecological generality, reminiscent of Liem's paradox (morphological specialization allows organisms to have broader niches). Another possible explanation is that diverse ceratioid morphologies may yield similar trophic success (many-to-one mapping of morphology to diet), allowing diversity to arise through neutral evolutionary processes. Our results highlight that there are many ways to be a successful predator in the deep sea.
Zenodo
Hart, Pamela
5f06cd47-279a-440e-84f0-bbecedf090af
Goatley, Christopher
b158dc1a-76f3-4ace-9d33-260d8c76ac93
Huie, Jonathan
e41c10ff-942d-4020-b35c-4adb890a499b
Arcila, Dahiana
27333283-a4b1-4d8c-ae9a-6134be549b38
Medeiros, Aline
c2660a11-05b4-498d-87ab-9477a3d35766
Miller, Elizabeth
e2406bde-6138-4e44-8be2-e289e0889ad9
Heiple, Zach
c2e5eed2-0b47-43f4-aa0f-f1fa0ec225de
Hart, Pamela
5f06cd47-279a-440e-84f0-bbecedf090af
Goatley, Christopher
b158dc1a-76f3-4ace-9d33-260d8c76ac93
Huie, Jonathan
e41c10ff-942d-4020-b35c-4adb890a499b
Arcila, Dahiana
27333283-a4b1-4d8c-ae9a-6134be549b38
Medeiros, Aline
c2660a11-05b4-498d-87ab-9477a3d35766
Miller, Elizabeth
e2406bde-6138-4e44-8be2-e289e0889ad9
Heiple, Zach
c2e5eed2-0b47-43f4-aa0f-f1fa0ec225de

(2023) Many ways to build an angler: diversity of feeding morphologies in a deep-sea evolutionary radiation. Zenodo doi:10.5061/dryad.qfttdz0n2 [Dataset]

Record type: Dataset

Abstract

Almost nothing is known about the diets of bathypelagic fishes, but functional morphology can provide useful tools to infer ecological processes. Here we quantify variation in jaw and tooth morphologies across anglerfishes (Lophiiformes), a clade spanning shallow and deep-sea habitats. Deep-sea ceratioid anglerfishes are believed to be dietary generalists due to the presumed necessity of opportunistic feeding in the food-limited bathypelagic zone. However, we found unexpected diversity in the trophic morphologies of ceratioid anglerfishes. Ceratioid jaws span a functional continuum ranging from species with numerous stout teeth, a relatively slow but forceful bite, and high jaw protrusibility at one extreme (characteristics shared with benthic anglerfishes), to species with large fang-like teeth, a fast but weak bite, and low jaw protrusibility at the other (including a unique "wolftrap" phenotype). Our finding of high morphological diversity seems to be at odds with ecological generality, reminiscent of Liem's paradox (morphological specialization allows organisms to have broader niches). Another possible explanation is that diverse ceratioid morphologies may yield similar trophic success (many-to-one mapping of morphology to diet), allowing diversity to arise through neutral evolutionary processes. Our results highlight that there are many ways to be a successful predator in the deep sea.

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More information

Published date: 13 June 2023

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 478737
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/478737
PURE UUID: a60f7fe2-476f-4ed6-bd42-40db4be7ea92
ORCID for Christopher Goatley: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2930-5591

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 07 Jul 2023 16:47
Last modified: 08 Jul 2023 01:59

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Contributors

Contributor: Pamela Hart
Contributor: Christopher Goatley ORCID iD
Contributor: Jonathan Huie
Contributor: Dahiana Arcila
Contributor: Aline Medeiros
Contributor: Elizabeth Miller
Contributor: Zach Heiple

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