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May
5, 2004
Scripps Scientists Look Deep Inside Sharks
And Their High-Performance Swimming System
By Mario Aguilera
Looks
can be deceiving, the saying goes, and the same can be said
of animals in the marine environment. To the casual observer,
it would appear that the mighty great white shark and the common
tuna don't have a lot in common. In fact, just the opposite
is true, according to new research led by scientists at Scripps
Institution of Oceanography at the University of California,
San Diego, and their colleagues in Germany.
In the first exploration
of muscle dynamics in live lamnid sharks (a group that includes
the great white and mako), the researchers found that in fact
tunas and lamnids share a surprisingly close array of swimming
muscle dynamics.
Scientists
who study large fish in the open ocean have long noted the similarities
in species that exhibit high-performance swimming mechanics,
particularly those built for fast and continuous motion. For
example, such swimming is exhibited in lamnid sharks, which
have long been suspected of sharing a basic locomotor design
with tunas.
"Tunas and lamnid
sharks have a body form that represents an extreme in biomechanical
design for high-performance swimming," said Scripps's Jeanine
Donley, the first author of the study appearing in the May 6
issue of the scientific journal Nature. In fact, the research
study, she says, reveals an "unprecedented level"
of similarity between the two, including the dynamics of steady
swimming and functional design of their complex locomotor systems.
The researchers set
out to investigate the evolutionary crossroads between lamnid
sharks and tunas in regards to the mechanics and architecture
of their muscle-tendon systems. Recent research has uncovered
a muscle design in tunas that separate them from their related
"bony" fishes (see http://scrippsnews.ucsd.edu/pressreleases/shadwick_tuna1.cfm).
But similar investigations probing the biomechanical designs
of lamnid sharks had not been successful, mainly due to the
extreme difficulty in studying such large, elusive and dangerous
predators.

"As apex predators
in the ocean these sharks are important and becoming rare,"
said study coauthor Robert Shadwick, a professor in the Marine
Biology Research Division at Scripps. "In this study we
have found that lamnid sharks have diverged from their shark
ancestors in the mechanical design of their swimming apparatus,
just as tunas diverged from their bony fish ancestors in much
the same way over the last 50 million years or so."
Donley and her colleagues
used several research methods during the study. These included
analyzing video recordings of mako sharks in a swim tunnel.
They also used a device called a sonomicrometer to precisely
record muscle shortening and lengthening during swimming activity.
And they used an array of computer-based techniques to explore
the three-dimensional characteristics of shark tendons and how
they connect to muscles.
The
combined results, which remarkably matched similar studies in
tunas, displayed a unique biomechanical design in which powerful
red muscles in the front of lamnid sharks transfer energy to
the tail region. This high-performance muscle system serves
for powerful swimming propulsion, not unlike a natural, thrust-producing
hydrofoil.
"It's interesting
because the area of the body that is producing this motion is
not the same area of the body that is moving back and forth-it's
physically separated," said Donley. "It's exactly
like tuna in that respect."
The authors say these
characteristics distinguish lamnid sharks and tunas from virtually
all other fish and arose independently in each, most likely
the result of evolutionary selection for fast and continuous
locomotion. Shadwick says in this respect lamnids and tunas
are more like each other than they are to their closest relatives.
The authors believe
the study shows that not only have the physical demands of the
external environment sculpted the body shapes of these species,
but also the internal physiology and "morphology,"
or form and structure, of their complex locomotor systems have
been fine-tuned over the course of their evolution.
"Sharks
and bony fishes have been separated for over 400 million years
and yet we see one group of sharks and one group of bony fish
that share a remarkable host of similarities in body form and
function," said Donley. "It's interesting to understand
how mechanical design principles influence the evolution of
locomotion in these animals." Coauthors of the research
paper, in addition to Donley and Shadwick, include Chugey Sepulveda
of Scripps Institution, and Peter Konstantinidis and Sven Gemballa
of the University of Tübingen in Germany.
Funding for the study
was provided by the National Science Foundation and the University
of California Regents.
Media Contacts: Mario
Aguilera or Cindy
Clark (858) 534-3624
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