Abstract

The nature of the bivalve filter-pump was further elucidated in the n~ussel Mytilus edulis by investigating effects of temperature on pump and system characteristics. Pumping rates increased with temperature, linearly correlated with the temperature-determined decrease in viscosity of the water. The variation in pumping rate with temperature thus corresponded to the varying viscous resistance to water flow in the canal system of the mussel-pump. The increase in beat frequency of the lateral cilia with temperature therefore had no clear effect on the pumping rate. Also, spawning stimulation of beat frequency was without effect on pumping rates. In the back pressure-flow characteristic of fully open, active mussels, pump pressure at zero flow (AH;) was independent of temperature. Predictions based on the pump modelled as a leaky, viscous, constant-force pump were in good agreement with measured and estimated pump parameters, further supporting the concept of suspension-feeding bivalves as filter-pumps that process the ambient water autonomously that is, in the absence of physiological mechanisms for regulating water pumping.

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