Муренові: відмінності між версіями

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Створена сторінка: {{Taxobox | name = Муренові | image = Moray_eel.jpg | image_width = 265px | fossil_range = З раннього Міоцену<ref name=FB>{{FishBase...
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Версія за 09:17, 26 травня 2012

Муренові
Час існування: З раннього Міоцену[1]

Біологічна класифікація
Домен: Ядерні (Eukaryota)
Царство: Тварини (Metazoa)
Підцарство: Справжні багатоклітинні (Eumetazoa)
Тип: Хордові (Chordata)
Підтип: Черепні (Craniata)
Надклас: Щелепні (Gnathostomata)
Клас: Променепері (Actinopterygii)
Підклас: Новопері (Neopterygii)
Інфраклас: Костисті риби (Teleostei)
Ряд: Вугроподібні (Anguilliformes)
Підряд: Вугровидні (Anguilloidei)
Родина: Muraenidae

Див. текст

Посилання
Вікісховище: Muraenidae
EOL: 8287
ITIS: 161160
NCBI: 46660
Fossilworks: 132681

Муренові (Muraenidae) - космополітична родина вугрів. Налічує близько 200 видів у 15 родах. Майже виключно морські види, але деякі зустрічаються у солонуватих водах і навіть у прісних (таким є мурена прісноводна, Gymnothorax polyuranodon).[2]

Анатомія

Photo of undulating moray on top of a coral colony
Muraena helena showing typical moray eel morphology: robust anguilliform shape, lack of pectoral fins and circular gill openings

The dorsal fin extends from just behind the head along the back and joins seamlessly with the caudal and anal fins. Most species lack pectoral and pelvic fins, adding to their serpentine appearance. Their eyes are rather small; morays rely on their highly developed sense of smell, lying in wait to ambush prey.

The body is generally patterned. In some species, the inside of the mouth is also patterned. Their jaws are wide, framing a protruding snout. Most possess large teeth that are designed to tear flesh or grasp slippery prey items. A relatively small number of species, for example the snowflake moray (Echidna nebulosa) and zebra moray (Gymnomuraena zebra), primarily feed on crustaceans and other hard-shelled animals, and they have blunt, molar-like teeth suitable for crushing.[3]

Two diagrams of head and spine, one showing the pharyngeal jaw at rest; the other showing the jaws extended into the mouth
Moray eel jaw anatomy

Moray eels' heads are too narrow to create the negative pressure that most fish use to swallow prey. Quite possibly because of this, they have a second set of jaws in their throat called pharyngeal jaws, which also possess teeth. When feeding, morays launch these jaws into the mouth, where they grasp prey and transport it into the throat and digestive system. Moray eels are the only animal that uses pharyngeal jaws to actively capture and restrain prey.[4][5][6] Larger morays are capable of seriously wounding humans.

Morays secrete a protective mucus over their smooth, scaleless skin which in some species contains a toxin. Morays have much thicker skin and high densities of goblet cells in the epidermis that allows mucus to be produced at a higher rate than in other eel species. This allows sand granules to adhere to the sides of their burrows in sand-dwelling morays,[7] thus making the walls of the burrow more permanent due to the glycosylation of mucins in mucus. Their small circular gills, located on the flanks far posterior to the mouth, require the moray to maintain a gap in order to facilitate respiration.

Morays are carnivorous and feed primarily on other fish, cephalopods, molluscs, and crustaceans. Groupers, barracudas and sea snakes are among their few predators. There is a commercial fishery for several species, but some cause ciguatera fish poisoning.

Behavior

Cooperative hunting

Photo of eel with shrimp in its mouth
A Pacific cleaner shrimp cleans the mouth of a moray eel.
Photo of eel with head and neck protruding from sandy ocean bottom
Ribbon moray,
Rhinomuraena quaesita

Reef-associated roving coralgroupers (Plectropomus pessuliferus) have been observed to recruit morays to join them in hunting for food. The invitation to hunt is initiated by head-shaking. The rationale for this joining of forces is the ability of morays to enter narrow crevices and flush prey from niches not accessible to groupers. This is the only known instance of interspecies cooperative hunting among fish. Cooperation on other levels, such as at cleaning stations is well-known.[8][9]

Photo of eel in coral with wide open mouth
Fimbriated moray,
Gymnothorax fimbriatus

Reputation

The morays are frequently thought of as particularly vicious or ill-tempered animals. In truth, morays hide from humans in crevices and would rather flee than fight. Morays are shy and secretive, and attack humans only in self-defence or mistaken identity. Most attacks stem from disruption of a moray's burrow (to which they do react strongly), but an increasing number also occur during hand-feeding of morays by divers, an activity often used by dive companies to attract tourists. Morays have poor vision and rely mostly on their acute sense of smell, making distinguishing between fingers and held food difficult; numerous divers have lost fingers while attempting hand feedings. For this reason the hand feeding of moray eels has been banned in some locations, including the Great Barrier Reef. The moray's rear-hooked teeth and primitive but strong bite mechanism also makes bites on humans more severe, as the eel cannot release its grip even in death and must be manually pried off. While the majority are not believed to be venomous, circumstantial evidence suggests that a few species may be.[3]

Eels that have eaten certain types of toxic algae, or more frequently that have eaten fishes that have eaten some of these algae, can cause ciguatera fish poisoning if eaten. Morays rest in crevices during the day and hunt nocturnally, although they may ensnare small fish and crustaceans that pass near them during the day.[9]

Habitat

Moray eels are cosmopolitan, found in both tropical and temperate seas, although the largest species richness is at reefs in warm oceans. Very few species occur outside the tropics or subtropics, and the ones that do only extend marginally beyond these regions. They live at depths of up to several hundred metres, where they spend most of their time concealed inside crevices and alcoves. While several species regularly are found in brackish water, very few species can be found in freshwater, for example the freshwater moray (Gymnothorax polyuranodon) and the pink-lipped moray eel (Echidna rhodochilus).

Таксономія

Роди

Whitemouth moray, Gymnothorax meleagris

Література

  1. Froese R., Pauly D. (eds.) (2009). Родина Muraenidae на FishBase. Версія за January 2009 року.
  2. Froese R., Pauly D. (eds.) (2010). Gymnothorax polyuranodon на FishBase. Версія за January 2010 року.
  3. а б Randall, J. E. (2005). Reef and Shore Fishes of the South Pacific. University of Hawi'i Press. ISBN 0-8248-2698-1
  4. Mehtal, Rita S.; Peter C. Wainwright (6 вересня 2007). Raptorial jaws in the throat help moray eels swallow large prey. Nature. 449 (7158): 79—82. doi:10.1038/nature06062. PMID 17805293. Процитовано 6 вересня 2007.
  5. Hopkin, Michael (5 вересня 2007). Eels imitate alien: Fearsome fish have protruding jaws in their throats to grab prey. Nature News. doi:10.1038/news070903-11. Процитовано 6 вересня 2007.
  6. National Science Foundation (Sep. 5, 2007)
  7. Fishelson L (September 1996). Skin morphology and cytology in marine eels adapted to different lifestyles. Anat Rec. 246 (1): 15—29. doi:10.1002/(SICI)1097-0185(199609)246:1<15::AID-AR3>3.0.CO;2-E. PMID 8876820.
  8. In the December 2006 issue of the journal Public Library of Science Biology, a team of biologists announced the discovery of interspecies cooperative hunting involving morays. The biologists, who were engaged in a study of Red Sea cleaner fish (fish that enter the mouths of other fish to rid them of parasites), made the discovery.An Amazing First: Two Species Cooperate to Hunt | LiveScience
  9. а б Bshary R, Hohner A, Ait-el-Djoudi K, Fricke H (Dec 2006). Interspecific communicative and coordinated hunting between groupers and giant moray eels in the Red Sea. PLoS Biol. 4 (12): e431. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.0040431. PMC 1750927. PMID 17147471.{{cite journal}}: Обслуговування CS1: Сторінки із непозначеним DOI з безкоштовним доступом (посилання)

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