Swimming in Formation in Krill (Euphausiacea), a hypothesis: Dynamics of the flow field, properties of antennular sensor systems and a sensory-motor link

The act of swimming in formation by species such as Euphausia superba , Antarctic krill, is assumed to be regulated by a sensitivity to the characteristic and spatially elaborate flow field produced by this species of shrimp. We used a related species, Meganyctiphanes , North-Atlantic krill, to visu...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Plankton Research
Main Authors: Patria, Mufti P., Wiese, Konrad
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:http://plankt.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/fbh122v1
https://doi.org/10.1093/plankt/fbh122
Description
Summary:The act of swimming in formation by species such as Euphausia superba , Antarctic krill, is assumed to be regulated by a sensitivity to the characteristic and spatially elaborate flow field produced by this species of shrimp. We used a related species, Meganyctiphanes , North-Atlantic krill, to visualize the flow field produced by tethered shrimps in an aquarium. In this situation the propulsion jetflow some centimeters behind the shrimp is surrounded by a vortex-ring of recoiling water motion from which, if the vortex is also produced by unrestrained swimming shrimp, a following shrimp hypothetically can draw forces of lift and propulsion to decrease energy expense in long distance migration. Two antennular sensitivities to water vibration in frequency ranges 5-40 and 40 to 150 Hz were calibrated and the activity of connected interneurons was traced into the abdominal pleopod-carrying segments. Water oscillation of 3-10 Hz frequency, applied to the antennules, was shown to entrain a closely synchronous pleopod beat in the stimulated specimens.