Why are fish fish-shaped? - Lauren Sallan

603,828 views ・ 2018-04-17

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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In tropical seas,
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flying fish leap out of the water,
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gliding for up to 200 meters using wing-like fins,
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before dipping back into the sea.
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In the Indo-Pacific,
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a hunting sailfish can reach speeds of 110 kilometers per hour.
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That’s 11 times faster than Olympic swimming champion Michael Phelps.
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It can then stick up its spiny dorsal fin like a brake,
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grinding to a dead halt, mid-swim.
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Each of these physical feats is made possible by a fish’s form,
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which in most species is a smooth, elongated body, fins, and a tail.
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These features are shared across thousands of fish species,
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each introducing its own variations on the theme to survive in unique habitats.
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What makes these features so commonplace in fish,
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and what does it reveal about the more than 33,000 fish species
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that inhabit earth’s rivers, lakes, and seas?
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Fish can be split into two main groups,
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according to the type of motion they favor.
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The first is body and caudal fin driven motion,
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and most fish species, about 85%, fall into this group.
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Here, the body and tail are the primary propelling forces,
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with fins mainly playing a stabilizing and steering role.
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This configuration suits many open-water species,
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which need speed, thrust and control for constant, efficient swimming.
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Eels lie at one extreme of this group.
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Known as anguilliform swimmers,
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their entire bodies undulate to generate a wave-like motion.
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Compared to anguilliform fish,
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species like salmon and trout, known as subcarangiforms,
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use about two-thirds of their body mass to generate motion,
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while carangiform swimmers, such as mackerel,
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only use about a third.
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Typically, the less of its mass a fish uses to generate motion,
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the more streamlined its shape.
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At the other end of the spectrum from eels are ostraciiform species like boxfish,
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and thunniform swimmers like tuna.
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In these fish, the tails, also known as caudal fins, do the work.
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A tuna’s tail is attached by tendons to multiple muscles in its body.
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It powers the body like an engine,
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forcefully catapulting the bullet-like fish
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to speeds up to 69 kilometers per hour.
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The second major fish group relies on median and paired fin motion,
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meaning they’re propelled through the water predominantly by their fins.
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Fins allow fine-tuned movement at slow speeds,
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so this propulsion is typically found in fish
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that have to navigate complex habitats.
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Bottom-dwelling fishes, like rays, fall into this group;
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using their huge pectoral fins, they can lift themselves swiftly off the sea floor.
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That conveniently allows them to inhabit shallow seas
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without being buffeted about by waves.
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Similarly, shallow-water flatfish use their entire bodies
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as one big fin to hoist themselves up off the sand.
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Ocean sunfish lack tails,
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so they move around slowly by beating their wing-like median fins instead.
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Similar movements are shared by many reef species,
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like the queen angelfish,
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surgeonfish,
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and wrasse.
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Their focus on fins has taken the demand off their bodies,
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many of which have consequently evolved into unusual and inventive shapes.
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There are fishes within both groups that seem to be outliers.
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But if you look closer,
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you’ll notice that these common traits are disguised.
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Seahorses, for instance, don’t appear fish-shaped in any conventional way,
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yet they use their flexible dorsal fins as makeshift tails.
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A pufferfish may occasionally look more like a lethal balloon,
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but if it needs to swim rapidly, it’ll retract its spines.
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Handfish look like they have legs,
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but really these limb-like structures are fins,
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modified to help them amble across the sea floor.
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For fish, motion underpins survival,
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so it’s become a huge evolutionary driver of form.
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The widespread features of fish have been maintained
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across tens of thousands of fish species,
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not to mention other ocean-dwelling animals,
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like penguins,
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dolphins,
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sea slugs,
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and squids.
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And that’s precisely because they’ve proven so successful.
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