Evolution of diet, trophic morphologies and habitat transitions in the diverse combtooth blennies (Ovalentaria: Blenniidae)

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Persistent link to this item

Statistics
View Statistics

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Title

Evolution of diet, trophic morphologies and habitat transitions in the diverse combtooth blennies (Ovalentaria: Blenniidae)

Published Date

2016-06

Publisher

Type

Thesis or Dissertation

Abstract

This research examines the evolution of diet, trophic morphologies and habitat transitions in combtooth blennies. Blennies are small marine fishes found in many different habitats through out the tropics and temperate zones. Chapter 1 provided the first molecular phylogeny of blennies and used it to explore the evolution of habitat association and transitions. This highly resolved and thoroughly sampled blenniid phylogeny redefines the taxonomy of the group and supports the use of 13 unranked clades for the classification of blenniids. Ancestral state reconstructions identified four independent invasions of intertidal habitats and subsequent invasions into supralittoral and freshwater habitats from these groups. In chapter 2 I describe the diet of 30 blenny species from Japan. Blennies were divided into seven feeding groups: omnivores, herbivores, detritivores, molluscivores, corallivores, worm-like invertebrate feeders, and fish mucus/scale/ray feeders. The largest cluster, detritivores, contained 17 blenny species from all habitat zones and both climate zones. The findings suggest closely related species fill similar feeding niches and detritus is an important component of many blenny diets. Chapter three examines the evolution of trophic morphology and diet using more through well-sampled phylogeny (142 species), diet data (130 species) and morphological data (118 species). Results strongly suggested that numerous, thin, blunt, flexible, and long teeth with narrow spacing is correlated with a diet consisting largely of detritus. Despite their position at a morphological extreme of teleost tooth morphology, the long teeth of blennies still exhibit substantial, measurable variation in tooth shape, count, and attachment, as well as substantial variation in diet.

Keywords

Description

University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation.June 2016. Major: Conservation Biology. Advisor: Andrew Simons. 1 computer file (PDF); vi, 91 pages.

Related to

Replaces

License

Collections

Series/Report Number

Funding information

Isbn identifier

Doi identifier

Previously Published Citation

Suggested citation

Hundt, Peter. (2016). Evolution of diet, trophic morphologies and habitat transitions in the diverse combtooth blennies (Ovalentaria: Blenniidae). Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/190557.

Content distributed via the University Digital Conservancy may be subject to additional license and use restrictions applied by the depositor. By using these files, users agree to the Terms of Use. Materials in the UDC may contain content that is disturbing and/or harmful. For more information, please see our statement on harmful content in digital repositories.