Mar. 8,
2013 — Imagine trying to swim through a pool of honey. Because of their
small size, this is what swimming in water is like for tiny marine plankton.
So, it was often assumed they would be easy prey, especially in the dense
viscosity of colder waters, but that is not necessarily so.
Texas Tech
Associate Professor and Whitacre Endowed Chair in Mechanical Engineering Jian
Sheng, along with biologists Brad Gemmell and Edward Buskey from the University of Texas Marine Science Institute, have
discovered new information that explains how these tiny organisms overcome this
disadvantage.
Their paper,
titled "A compensatory escape mechanism at low Reynolds number" was
published in the current issue of Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences.
"The
purpose of the study was in trying to determine the effects of climate change
at the very base of the food chain," Sheng said.
As one of the
most abundant animal groups on the planet, many species, including many
commercially important fish species, rely on planktonic copepod nauplii at some
point during their life cycle. Understanding the ability of these animals to
respond to changes in the environment could have direct implications into
understanding the future health of our oceans.
By
independently varying temperature and viscosity, Sheng recorded their movements
with 3-D high speed holographic techniques developed by the Sheng lab at Texas
Tech.
"At 3,000
frames per second, it was like tracking a racecar through a microscope,"
Sheng said. "We were able to determine that the plankton adapted to
changes in viscosity by altering the rhythm of its pulsing appendage."
The response,
built-in to its natural muscle fiber, was only triggered by changes in
temperature, Sheng said. It could not compensate for changes in viscosity due
to environmental pollution, such as algae blooms or oil spills.
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