Nectophore coordination and kinematics by physonect siphonophores
Nectophore coordination and kinematics by physonect siphonophores
Date
2023-09-27
Authors
Strock, Shirah
Costello, John H.
Daniels, Joost
Katija, Kakani
Colin, Sean
Costello, John H.
Daniels, Joost
Katija, Kakani
Colin, Sean
Linked Authors
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Date Created
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DOI
10.1242/jeb.245955
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Keywords
Cnidarian
Jellyfish
Metachronal
Multi-jet propulsion
Zooplankton
Jellyfish
Metachronal
Multi-jet propulsion
Zooplankton
Abstract
Siphonophores are ubiquitous and often highly abundant members of pelagic ecosystems throughout the open ocean. They are unique among animal taxa in that many species use multiple jets for propulsion. Little is known about the kinematics of the individual jets produced by nectophores (the swimming bells of siphonophores) or whether the jets are coordinated during normal swimming behavior. Using remotely operated vehicles and SCUBA, we video recorded the swimming behavior of several physonect species in their natural environment. The pulsed kinematics of the individual nectophores that comprise the siphonophore nectosome were quantified and, based on these kinematics, we examined the coordination of adjacent nectophores. We found that, for the five species considered, nectophores located along the same side of the nectosomal axis (i.e. axially aligned) were coordinated and their timing was offset such that they pulsed metachronally. However, this level of coordination did not extend across the nectosome and no coordination was evident between nectophores on opposite sides of the nectosomal axis. For most species, the metachronal contraction waves of nectophores were initiated by the apical nectophores and traveled dorsally. However, the metachronal wave of Apolemia rubriversa traveled in the opposite direction. Although nectophore groups on opposite sides of the nectosome were not coordinated, they pulsed with similar frequencies. This enabled siphonophores to maintain relatively linear trajectories during swimming. The timing and characteristics of the metachronal coordination of pulsed jets affects how the jet wakes interact and may provide important insight into how interacting jets may be optimized for efficient propulsion.
Description
Author Posting. © The Company of Biologists, 2023. This article is posted here by permission of The Company of Biologists for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Strock, S., Costello, J. H., Daniels, J., Katija, K., & Colin, S. P. (2023). Nectophore coordination and kinematics by physonect siphonophores. The Journal of Experimental Biology, jeb.245955, https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.245955.
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Citation
Strock, S., Costello, J. H., Daniels, J., Katija, K., & Colin, S. P. (2023). Nectophore coordination and kinematics by physonect siphonophores. The Journal of Experimental Biology, jeb.245955.