How reef fish use their fins to fly underwater against currents
June 18th, 2008 - 2:56 pm ICT by ANI - Send to a friend:Canberra, June 18 (ANI): A team of researchers has found how some reef fish use their fins to fly underwater, allowing them to survive in the sometimes cyclonic currents surrounding coral reefs.
According to a report in ABC Science, the research was led by Chris Fulton from The Australian National University, who noticed the wing-like fins on the parrotfish during surveys of coral reefs in Australia.
We were surveying different reef fish across different gradients on the Great Barrier Reef and we noticed that some of the ones that lived in the very shallow areas were very abundant — lots of individuals of just a few species, said Fulton.
When we looked at those few species in a bit more detail, we noticed something a bit unique about their fins - a wing-shaped fin, he added.
The wing shape allows fish such as parrotfish, wrasse and surgeonfish to fly through the water using a figure-of-eight pattern.
Most fish when they move their pectoral fins on the side of their body, they move them just like you row a boat - they have a power stroke and then a recovery stroke, said Fulton. By doing that they are only creating thrust half the time, he added.
According to Fulton, fish with wing-shaped fins keep them spread at all times and sweep in a figure-of-eight pattern that constantly generates thrust.
They do this by inclining their fins at just the right angle to create lift from the water flowing over the fin, similar to the way air moves over the wing of a bird to propel them through their air, he said.
The extra push that the wing-like fins give the fish helps them survive in the shallow and sometimes turbulent waters surrounding coral reefs, said Fulton.
Theyre dealing with waves crashing on to them all day, everyday, and those crashing waves create water motions that are extreme, he said.
Fulton and his colleagues observed the fish swimming around the reef and in flow tanks, which allowed them to record the fishs movement on high-speed video cameras.
They found some species could move at up to 10 body lengths per second. By comparison, Olympic champions reach speeds of just 1.3 body lengths per second, and then only for the brief 22 seconds of the 50-meter freestyle sprint.
According to Fulton, the US Office of Naval Research has taken interest in the research, looking to use it in the development of future remote control submersibles. (ANI)
Related Stories
- Tiny reef fish inspire submarine designers - June 18, 2008
- Too much sand in water leads to dead corals - October 9, 2008
- Invasion of predatory lionfish is threatening tropical fish populations and coral reefs - July 18, 2008
- Pioneer fish could save coral reefs - October 1, 2008
- Excess sediment in waters bad for coral health - October 9, 2008
- Climate change threatens 4,000 species of fish, corals - June 17, 2008
- Butterfly fish may face extinction - February 25, 2008
- Starfish outbreak threatens Earths richest center of coral reef biodiversity - January 15, 2008
- Weed-eating rabbit fish key to saving Great Barrier Reef from destruction - March 20, 2008
- Despite preservation efforts, coral reefs continue to decline - April 6, 2008
- Despite preservation efforts, coral reefs continue to decline (Re-Issue) - April 7, 2008
- Climate change wreaks havoc on coral reefs worldwide - August 26, 2008
- Scientists discover new coral reef in the Seychelles - October 26, 2008
- Clownfish uses its nose to find its way home - August 27, 2008
- Protection does help endangered species: study - June 25, 2008
- abc science
- air moves
- chris fulton
- coral reefs
- crashing waves
- figure of eight
- fishs
- fulton fish
- gradients
- great barrier reef
- parrotfish
- pectoral fins
- power stroke
- reef fish
- right angle
- shallow areas
- surgeonfish
- turbulent waters
- wing shape
- wrasse
Posted in Health Science, |

