Categories: World

Sharks shrug shoulders at feeding study

With a shrug of its shoulders, according to a study published Wednesday in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

That rates as Big News for specialists, who have long assumed that U-shaped cartilage between the head and body existed only to control the predator’s front-most fins.

Not so, according to lead author Ariel Camp, a postdoctoral researcher at Brown University in the US state of Rhode Island.

Advertisement

“Sharks don’t have tongues to move food through their mouths,” she said in a statement. “They have this long pharynx, and they have to keep food moving down it.”

Bottom-feeding bamboo sharks, which grow to about a metre (three feet) and are harmless to humans, favour a diet of small fish and invertebrates such as crabs.

They create suction to grasp their prey, but Camp suspected that the cartilage played a role in pushing things along the digestive tract.

Advertisement

To find out, she and her team strategically implanted bits of tungsten carbide in three live sharks to see if the shoulder-like cartilage moved as the animals feasted in a laboratory setting.

They used a cutting-edge technology called X-ray Reconstruction of Moving Morphology, or X-ROMM, which combines CT scans of the skeleton with high-speed, high-resolution X-ray movies.

Sure enough, a fraction of a second after the mouth closed around a bit of squid or herring, the “shoulder girdle” quickly rotated backward — from head to tail — by about 11 degrees.

Advertisement

Camp suspects that other suction-feeding sharks also shrug their shoulders this way too.

For more news your way

Download our app and read this and other great stories on the move. Available for Android and iOS.

Published by
By Agence France Presse