Posted by Armin on Wednesday, August 17, 2011
A video filmed at 300 fps of an axolotl trying to snatch up a food pellet. (Unfortunately, it fails both times to swallow the pellet.) Playback is slowed down to about 10x, and then 50x the actual speed of the feeding reflex. Filmed with a Casio Exilim EX-F1. Video quality is certainly not the best, but the video is still interesting, I think.
Embedded YouTube video:
Timing stats
When crudely measuring the delays between events in 4 video sequences, I find the following numbers:
delay 1: Time from impact of food pellet to visible reaction of axolotl delay_1 = [30 37 43 63]; mean_1 = 43 ms std_1 = 14 ms delay 2: Time from visible reaction to fully opened mouth delay_2 = [17 23 27 40]; mean_2 = 27 ms std_2 = 10 ms
A reaction time of about 40 ms isn't too shabby; and the mouth snaps open wickedly fast within about 30 ms. The variability in timing probably arise from the axolotls sitting at different depths that I didn't control for. Presumably, detection of the food pellet happens through mechanosensors of the lateral line organ that detect the slight pressure changes that happen when a pellet hits the water. Measuring the delays in a more controlled way would be a nice science projects for kids…