DISAMPING KANAN INI.............
PLEASE USE ........ "TRANSLATE MACHINE" .. GOOGLE TRANSLATE BESIDE RIGHT THIS
..................
ikan cat fish toothy dengan
moncong bulldog menentang klasifikasi
Kryptoglanis
shajii adalah ikan aneh--. Para ilmuwan baru-baru ini telah menyediakan penjelasan rinci tentang
ikan yang aneh struktur tulang .....read more
A tiny, toothy catfish with bulldog snout defies classification
Date:
May 13, 2014
Source:
Drexel University
Summary:
Kryptoglanis shajii is a strange fish -- and the
closer scientists look, the stranger it gets. This small subterranean catfish
sees the light of day and human observers only rarely, when it turns up in
springs, wells and flooded rice paddies. Scientists have recently provided a
detailed description of this fish's bizarre bone structures.
.........................
Kryptoglanis
shajii is a strange fish -- and the closer scientists look, the
stranger it gets. This small subterranean catfish sees the light of day and
human observers only rarely, when it turns up in springs, wells and flooded
rice paddies in the Western Ghats mountain region of Kerala, India. It was
first described as a new species in 2011.
Soon after
that, John Lundberg, PhD, one of the world's leading authorities on catfishes,
started taking a closer look at several specimens.
A close-up
scanned image of the bony structures in the fish's toothy face -- somewhat
resembling the creature from the movie Alien
"The
more we looked at the skeleton, the stranger it got,"said Lundberg,
emeritus curator of Ichthyology at the Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel
University and emeritus professor at Drexel in the College of Arts and
Sciences. His team's study describing the detailed bone structure of Kryptoglanis
is now published in the 2014 issue of the Proceedings of the Academy of
Natural Sciences of Philadelphia.
"The
characteristics of this animal are just so different that we have a hard time
fitting it into the family tree of catfishes," said Lundberg.
From the
outside, Kryptoglanis does not look particularly unusual for a catfish.
But when Lundberg and his colleagues looked at its bones using digital
radiography and high-definition CAT scans, they found some surprises.
Kryptoglanis was missing several bony elements -- a characteristic
fairly common for subterranean fish. But there were also changes in the shapes
of certain bones, changes so strange that Lundberg described them as
"completely unique among catfishes and all fishes as far as I know."
Above: A
specimen of Kryptoglanis shajii that was scanned in Lundberg's team's
study. Credit: Kyle Luckenbill, Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel
University
Numerous
individual bones were modified in the face, giving the fish a compressed front
end with a jutting lower jaw -- like a bulldog's snout, if a bulldog also had
four rows of conical, sharp-tipped teeth.
Lateral view
of the head of a living Kryptoglanis shajii to show the projecting lower jaw.
Credit: Moncey Vincent and John Thomas and The Ichthyological Society of Japan
Posted with permission. To request permission to use this image elsewhere,
contact Toshio Kawai, Secretary, The Ichthyological Society of Japan,
kawai@museum.hokudai.ac.jp or +81-138-40-5553
Multiple
changes piled up in one part of the body could mean there is a functional
purpose for those changes. "In dogs that was the result of selective
breeding. In Kryptoglanis, we don't know yet what in their natural
evolution would have led to this modified shape," Lundberg said.
Based on its
teeth and subterranean home, Lundberg said that Kryptoglanis most likely
eats meat, in the form of small invertebrates and insect larvae -- whatever
might be found in the groundwater and could be captured by the fish, which at
less than ten centimeters is smaller than an adult human's pinkie finger. The
fish can move swiftly in its environment, as evidenced by video footage of
collected fish darting through water to grab food. [Source]
But why Kryptoglanis
is so different, and what its closest relatives are, remains a mystery.
Lundberg's
team wasn't alone in asking the question. Lundberg's team examined three
specimens of Kryptoglanis using digital radiography, and one of these
specimens using high-resolution X-ray computed tomography -- resulting in
detailed, three-dimensional CAT scan images after careful preparation and
analysis by Lundberg's colleague and co-author, Kyle Luckenbill, interim
collection manager and a research assistant at the Academy.
At the same
time, a separate team led by Ralf Britz at the Natural History Museum of London
independently examined the bone structure of Kryptoglanis using a
technique of visualizing the skeleton called clearing and staining -- a
chemical method in which the fish's soft tissues are rendered as clear as glass
and bones and cartilage are stained in contrasting colors. This team's
description of the structures was published in the March 2014 issue of the
journal Ichthyological Exploration of Freshwaters.
"There
was an amazing congruence between the results," Lundberg said.
"Neither of us was way out."
Neither
could figure out which other catfishes Kryptoglanis was most closely
related to, although Britz's team chose to assign it to its own new taxonomic
family within the order of catfishes.
This fish
just one of many unresolved branches on the catfish family tree, in a section
where even DNA evidence has thus far proven unhelpful. Subterranean species
like Kryptoglanis tend to have dramatically different DNA sequences from
one another and from their open-water relatives, making it difficult to
identify their evolutionary histories.
"It
continues to be a puzzle," Lundberg said.
Video
visualization of the fish's internal bony structures is available at http://youtu.be/PBqndwVdnrc.
Story
Source:
The above
story is based on materials provided by Drexel University. Note: Materials may be edited
for content and length.
Journal
Reference:
- John G. Lundberg, Kyle R. Luckenbill, K.K. Subhash Babu, Heok Hee Ng. A tomographic osteology of the taxonomically puzzling catfishKryptoglanis shajii(Siluriformes, Siluroidei,incertae sedis): description and a first phylogenetic interpretation. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 2014; 163 (1): 1 DOI: 10.1635/053.163.0101
