Abstract

Planktonic organisms feed while suspended in water using various hydrodynamic pumping strategies. Appendicularians are a unique group of plankton that use their tail to pump water over mucous mesh filters to concentrate food particles. As ubiquitous and often abundant members of planktonic ecosystems, they play a major role in oceanic food webs. Yet, we lack a complete understanding of the fluid flow that underpins their filtration. Using high-speed, high-resolution video and micro particle image velocimetry, we describe the kinematics and hydrodynamics of the tail in Oikopleura dioica in filtering and free-swimming postures. We show that sinusoidal waves of the tail generate peristaltic pumping within the tail chamber with fluid moving parallel to the tail when filtering. We find that the tail contacts attachment points along the tail chamber during each beat cycle, serving to seal the tail chamber and drive pumping. When we tested how the pump performs across environmentally relevant temperatures, we found that the amplitude of the tail was invariant but tail beat frequency increased threefold across three temperature treatments (5°C, 15°C and 25°C). Investigation into this unique pumping mechanism gives insight into the ecological success of appendicularians and provides inspiration for novel pump designs.

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