Swimming in an Unsteady World
Authored by T Cooper, M A R Koehl
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1093/icb/icv092
Sponsors:
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Synopsis When animals swim in aquatic habitats, the water through which
they move is usually flowing. Therefore, an important part of
understanding the physics of how animals swim in nature is determining
how they interact with the fluctuating turbulent water currents in their
environment. We addressed this issue using microscopic larvae of
invertebrates in ``fouling communities'' growing on docks and ships to
ask how swimming affects the transport of larvae between moving water
and surfaces from which they disperse and onto which they recruit. Field
measurements of the motion of water over fouling communities were used
to design realistic turbulent wavy flow in a laboratory wave-flume over
early-stage fouling communities. Fine-scale measurements of
rapidly-varying water-velocity fields were made using particleimage
velocimetry, and of dye-concentration fields (analog for chemical cues
from the substratum) were made using planar laser-induced fluorescence.
We used individual-based models of larvae that were swimming, passively
sinking, passively rising, or were passive and neutrally buoyant to
determine how their trajectories were affected by their motion through
the water, rotation by local shear, and transport by ambient flow.
Swimmers moved up and down in the turbulent flow more than did neutrally
buoyant larvae. Although more of the passive sinkers landed on substrata
below them, and more passive risers on surfaces above, swimming was the
best strategy for landing on surfaces if their location was not
predictable (as is true for fouling communities). When larvae moved
within 5 mm of surfaces below them, passive sinkers and
neutrally-buoyant larvae landed on the substratum, whereas many of the
swimmers were carried away, suggesting that settling larvae should stop
swimming as they near a surface. Swimming and passively-rising larvae
were best at escaping from a surface below them, as precompetent larvae
must do to disperse away. Velocities, vorticities, and
odor-concentrations encountered by larvae fluctuated rapidly, with peaks
much higher than mean values. Encounters with concentrations of odor or
with vorticities above threshold increased as larvae neared the
substratum. Although microscopic organisms swim slowly, their locomotory
behavior can affect where they are transported by the movement of
ambient water as well as the signals they encounter when they move
within a few centimeters of surfaces.
Tags
Behavioral-responses
Habitat selection
Crassostrea-virginica larvae
Fouling communities
Vertical transport
Settlement cue
Oyster larvae
Sand dollars
Shear-flow
Water-flow