Secrets of a menace How the cypriniform palatal organ has become greatly modified to allow silver carp to thrive in eutrophic environments


Meeting Abstract

P2-173  Tuesday, Jan. 5 15:30  Secrets of a menace: How the cypriniform palatal organ has become greatly modified to allow silver carp to thrive in eutrophic environments HERNANDEZ, LP*; MCCALLEY, M; George Washington University; George Washington University phernand@gwu.edu

Silver carp, as well as a number of other Asian carp, have garnered recent interest as invasive species well-established within several American rivers and menacing to enter the Great Lakes. Part of the reason for their overwhelming success has been their capacity to feed so efficiently within eutrophic environments. While previous research has described the structure and function of the epibranchial organ (a snail-shaped structure comprised of highly modified branchial arches used to concentrate material filtered from the water column) other aspects of their feeding anatomy have been ignored. Although concentration of phytoplankton is important for efficient feeding, the actual filtration mechanism at the level of the gill rakers has not been investigated within a functional context. This is a particularly glaring omission given that silver carp possess highly derived gill rakers that interdigitate with extended ventral folds of the palatal organ. The palatal organ is an important structure located on the dorsal pharyngeal roof. Previous work has shown that it is important in a specialized type of feeding that characterizes goldfish and carp, in which particulate matter is captured by localized protrusion of this muscular structure. Recent work in our lab has revealed that the overwhelming majority of cypriniform species examined have a muscular palatal organ, however the specialized nature of the palatal organ of the silver carp rivals anything previously described. It has been suggested that the large palatal organ is simply used as a piston pump to drive water through the gill rakers. Given the complex muscular architecture of each palatal fold this proposed mechanism seems overly simplistic.

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