Morphometry and burst swimming in six continental fish species from Costa Rica

  • Quesada-Alvarado F
  • Campos-Calderón F
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Abstract

Introduction: Current research of fish locomotion is focused on creating better underwater vehicles and how environmental stress factors modify swimming. Objective: To study the relation of morphometric characteristics with burst swimming in six representative species of continental fishes from Costa Rica. Methods: We measured total length, standard length, height and area of the tail of 38 individuals from six species. We used a Kruskall-Wallis test and a Boxplot graphic to compare species; and a PCA test to identify body variables that influence swimming. A Non-Metric Dimensional Scaling (NMDS) test was done for species and position in the water column. Results: The fastest swimming corresponded to A. nigrofasciata (9,29cm/s), while S. salvini (1,65cm/s) was the slowest. Burst swimming speed is influenced by body size and tail type, and differed with position in the water column, being surface species the fastest. Conclusions: Morphological and ecological characteristics determine differences in burst swim.

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Quesada-Alvarado, F., & Campos-Calderón, F. (2019). Morphometry and burst swimming in six continental fish species from Costa Rica. UNED Research Journal, 11(3). https://doi.org/10.22458/urj.v11i3.2701

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