The remarkable underwater adhesion capacity of the invasive freshwater mussel species Dreissena polymorpha (zebra mussel) causes extensive damage each year. The adhesive interface between the substrate surface and the mussels’ adhesive plaques plays a key role in zebra mussel biofouling. Silicone-oil-infused polydimethylsiloxane (iPDMS), an omniphobic material in the class of liquid-infused slippery surfaces, has been shown to develop a uniform, microscale, antifouling surface oil layer, which we hypothesized would be effective against zebra mussel fouling. iPDMS substrates with varying levels of oil saturation were tested for their ability to disrupt mussel adhesion by characterizing zebra mussel reattachment in a simulated freshwater environment for 3 days. On fully saturated iPDMS samples or those near full saturation, zebra mussels showed no reattachment, compared to 41% reattachment on PDMS controls (no oil infusion). For lower saturation levels, the frequency of reattachment was decreased relative to PDMS controls. Mussel detachment forces decreased in iPDMS as compared to PDMS, and adhesive failures occurred more frequently with higher iPDMS saturations. Surface analysis of the subsaturated iPDMS substrates showed incomplete coverage of the surface oil layer. After 3 days of immersion in artificial freshwater, subsaturated iPDMS substrates showed a decrease in slipperiness (measured by water slide angle), whereas in fully saturated iPDMS, the slipperiness was unchanged, despite no observed oil loss in either group. The decrease in slipperiness is attributed to microfouling of the subsaturated substrates, consistent with incomplete surface oil layer coverage, and supports the notion that full oil layer coverage is required for effective antifouling properties. Employing iPDMS as an antifouling coating shows promise against freshwater mussel adhesion, and this work further aids in understanding the antifouling mechanism of iPDMS and the role of the plaque–substrate interface in freshwater mussel adhesion.
Rowing needs a standardized Gold Medal Standard (GMS) to clearly compare performance across boat classes in competition. Here, we report a method to factor out environmental effects, developing a fairer GMS for individual rowing events. We used results from World Rowing Championships and Olympics Games (2005–2016) to calculate the difference between the fastest winning time of the day and other event winning times on the same day. From this, we calculated a prognostic GMS time for each event via repeated k-fold cross-validation linear regression. Then, we compared these values with the 10-year average winning time and the World Best Time (WBT). We repeated this process to develop prognostic podium standard (PS) times. The prognostic GMS times (RMSE = 9.47; R 2 = 0.875) were universally slower than the WBT (current GMS) by 6.2 s on average but faster than the 10-year average by 12.3 s. The prognostic PS times (RMSE = 10.5; R 2 = 897) were also slower than the WBT but faster than the 10-year average, by 12.2 and 6.3 s respectively. Our time-difference prediction model based on historical data generates non-outlier prognostic times. With the utilization of relative time difference, this approach promises a selection standard independent of environmental conditions, easily applicable across different sports.
Like marine mussels, freshwater zebra and quagga mussels adhere via the byssus, a proteinaceous attachment apparatus. Attachment to various surfaces allows these invasive mussels to rapidly spread, however the adhesion mechanism is not fully understood. While marine mussel adhesion mechanics has been studied at the individual byssal-strand level, freshwater mussel adhesion has only been characterized through whole-mussel detachment, without direct interspecies comparisons on different substrates. Here, adhesive strength of individual quagga and zebra mussel byssal plaques were measured on smooth substrates with varying hydrophobicity—glass, PVC, and PDMS. With increased hydrophobicity of substrates, adhesive failures occurred more frequently, and mussel adhesion strength decreased. A new failure mode termed 'footprint failure' was identified, where failure appeared to be adhesive macroscopically, but a microscopic residue remained on the surface. Zebra mussels adhered stronger and more frequently on PDMS than quagga mussels. While their adhesion strengths were similar on PVC, there were differences in the failure mode and the plaque-substrate interface ultrastructure. Comparisons with previous marine mussel studies demonstrated that freshwater mussels adhere with comparable strength despite known differences in protein composition. An improved understanding of freshwater mussel adhesion mechanics may help explain spreading dynamics and will be important in developing effective antifouling surfaces.
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