Dear MARMAM readers,

My coauthor Haruka Ito and I are pleased to announce our new article published 
in early view in The Anatomical Record: Advances in Integrative Anatomy and 
Evolutionary Biology:
Sling, Scoop, and Squirter: Anatomical Features Facilitating Prey Transport, 
Processing, and Swallowing in Rorqual Whales (Mammalia: Balaenopteridae).
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ar.23606/full
Abstract: Much is known about lunge feeding in balaenopterid whales, but many 
key aspects of structure, function, and behavior have not yet been explained in 
detail, especially with regard to concentrating, positioning, and swallowing 
large aggregations of prey. We describe a novel system of three integrated 
structural components, all of which are involved in sequential feeding 
activities (intraoral transport, filtration, and swallowing of prey) that 
follow lunge-feeding engulfment of prey-laden water in rorquals: (1) a 
hammock-like muscular sling comprising extrinsic lingual musculature along the 
midline of the ventral pouch; (2) the flattened scoop-like arrangement of 
caudal-most baleen plates converging in the oropharynx adjacent to the 
esophageal opening; and (3) a flow-diverting flange at the posterior dorsum of 
the lip, by a flow channel at the angle of the mouth. Subsequent to contraction 
of the ventral pouch and concomitant expulsion of the mouthful of ingested 
water, these three structures together, we contend, aid in (1) channeling prey 
posteriorly toward the esophageal opening; (2) concentrating prey as excess 
water is squeezed from (what is presumed to be) the slurry-like mixture of 
nektonic and/or planktonic prey and water; and (3) guiding prey into the 
isthmus of the fauces while simultaneously (4) facilitating expulsion of water. 
These related functions occur along with, and are in part achieved by, 
elevation and retraction of the tongue and oral floor. Given their presumed 
functional role, these systems are best described as a suite of integrated 
structural adaptations. Anat Rec, 2017. (c) 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Best regards,
Alex Werth
_______________________________
Alexander J. Werth, Ph.D.
Trinkle Professor of Biology
Chair, Department of Biology
Hampden-Sydney College
Box 162, Hampden-Sydney, VA 23943
434-223-6326, fax 434-223-6374
http://www.hsc.edu/Academics/Academic-Majors/Biology/Professors/Alex-Werth.html

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