. Space Industry and Business News .




.
FLORA AND FAUNA
Tongue makes the difference in how fish and mammals chew
by Staff Writers
Providence RI (SPX) Jun 28, 2011

Nicolai Konow and colleagues have learned that fish chew differently from mammals. The evolutionary divergence likely occurred with amphibians, though further research is needed to identify which species and when. Credit: Mike Cohea/Brown

Evolution has made its marks - large and small - in innumerable patterns of life. New research from Brown University shows chewing has evolved too.

Researchers looked at muscles that control the movement of the jaw and tongue in fish and in mammals. They learned that fish use tongue muscles primarily to funnel the food farther into the mouth for processing, as if the morsel were an object in an assembly line. Mammals use tongue muscles to position the food, so that jaw muscles can best use teeth to chew the food.

The difference in chewing shows that animals have changed the way they chew and digest their food and that evolution must have played a role.

"It's pretty clear that all of these animals chew, but the involvement of the tongue in chewing differs," said Nicolai Konow, a postdoctoral researcher at Brown and the lead author on the study, published in the journal of Integrative and Comparative Biology. "And that brings up the question of what the muscles associated with the tongue and the jaw are doing."

In 2008 and last year, Konow and colleagues published papers showing the chewing technique of bowfin, pike, and fish with tiny teeth on their tongues such as salmon and osteoglossomorphs (fish with bony tongues). In some of these species, the researchers showed that chewing begins with the tongue positioned in the upper mouth.

Then the fish fires the muscle, called the sternohyoid, downward, retracting the tongue inward, before moving it forward again, and upward, to its original position in the upper mouth. With the fish facing left, the chewing cycle looks like an ellipse tilted at an angle, with the tongue moving in a clockwise direction.

The finding was bolstered by earlier research by other scientists that showed the same chewing pattern in other fish, including bichir (a freshwater fish in Africa), gar, and, importantly, lungfish, which is believed to represent an early stage in the transition of some species from exclusively water- to land-dwelling.

In this paper, Konow and his team studied how the muscles of three mammals acted during chewing: alpacas, goats, and pigs. They outfitted each with electrodes planted in the jaw and tongue muscles to pinpoint the activity of each set of muscles during chewing.

The analysis indicated that the animals' tongues thrust forward, and upward, as they began to chew and then fell back, or retracted, to their original position. With the animals facing left, the tongue traces an ellipse in a counter-clockwise direction for each cycle.

The distinction between fish and mammal chewing is likely there for a reason, Konow said. With fish, the tongue's function is to transport the food quickly into and through the mouth, where, in many species, an extra set (or sets) of jaws will grind the food. In addition, the tongue moves oxygenated water through the mouth to the gills, helping the fish to breathe.

"That's why you want to constantly have that inward movement with the tongue," Konow explained.

Mammals, on the other hand, use their tongues to set the food in the right spot in the mouth to maximize chewing. But even among closely related species, there is a surprising difference: Herbivores, such as alpacas and goats, were less coordinated during chewing than omnivores, represented by the pigs. Cud-chewing animals were not as monotonously rhythmic in their chewing as many would believe.

"It is a puzzling finding," Konow said. "We think the herbivore needs the bolus (the soft mass of chewed food) to be in a precise place between each chew. So the tongue may be constantly moving around to make sure the bolus is in the right place between chews."

Next came the task of figuring out where, when and with what species the divergence in chewing emerged. Previous research by Anthony Herrel, a Belgian biologist now based at the Museum National D'Histoire Naturelle in Paris, showed that lizards fire their tongues forward and upward as they begin chewing, just like mammals.

The thinking is that the transition likely occurred among amphibians. That makes sense, Konow said, and he plans to look next at amphibian chewing. "They're still locked to the water for reproduction," he said. "But you have some that become all terrestrial. And that's the next step on the evolutionary ladder."

Contributing authors include Herrel; Callum Ross from the University of Chicago; Susan Williams from Ohio University; Rebecca German from Johns Hopkins University; and Christopher Sanford and Chris Gintof from Hofstra University.




Related Links
Brown University
Darwin Today At TerraDaily.com

.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries






. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



FLORA AND FAUNA
Measuring body temperatures of dinosaurs for the first time
Pasadena CA (SPX) Jun 27, 2011
Were dinosaurs slow and lumbering, or quick and agile? It depends largely on whether they were cold or warm blooded. When dinosaurs were first discovered in the mid-19th century, paleontologists thought they were plodding beasts that had to rely on their environments to keep warm, like modern-day reptiles. But research during the last few decades suggests that they were faster creatures, n ... read more


FLORA AND FAUNA
12 percent of US adults own e-readers: survey

Microsoft takes Office into the 'cloud'

500,000 Android devices activated each day: Google

Top US court zaps violent videogame sales ban

FLORA AND FAUNA
Spain aims at military-civilian satellites

Network Integration Tests Aim to Reduce 'Fog of War'

Raytheon Receives US Navy Contract to Support Satellite Communication System

Firebird Uses Three Eyes and Fourth Sensor Payload

FLORA AND FAUNA
Arianespace to launch Astra 5B satellite

Arianespace receives the next Ariane 5 for launch in 2011

SpaceX Secures Launch Contract In Major Asian Market

SES-3 Satellite Arrives At Baikonour Launch Base

FLORA AND FAUNA
Study Shows Interference with GPS Poses Major Threat to U.S. Economy

Le Bourget contracts complete Galileo network

Galileo's Soyuz launchers arrive at French Guiana

Cont-Trak offers reliable container tracking via satellite

FLORA AND FAUNA
China to buy 88 A320 planes: Airbus

EU stands firm as polluting tax row threatens Airbus sales

Chile's LAN opts for eco-efficient Airbus

Embraer wins more orders for regional jet

FLORA AND FAUNA
A quiet phase: NIST optical tools produce ultra-low-noise microwave signals

International team demonstrates subatomic quantum memory in diamond

The fine art of etching

Magnetic properties of a single proton directly observed for the first time

FLORA AND FAUNA
NASA satellite gets 2 tropical cyclones in 1 shot

Paving the Way for Space-Based Air Pollution Sensors

Nigeria prepares to launch two earth observation satellites

NASA sees Hurricane Beatriz 'wink' on the Mexican coast

FLORA AND FAUNA
Brussels threatens fines over Naples waste

Waste piles cleared from central Naples

Residents set fire to garbage in Naples protests

Naples garbage men get armed guard as crisis escalates


Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily Express :: SpaceWar Express :: TerraDaily Express :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News
.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2011 - Space Media Network. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement