2010
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2010.0629
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Danger of zooplankton feeding: the fluid signal generated by ambush-feeding copepods

Abstract: Zooplankton feed in any of three ways: they generate a feeding current while hovering, cruise through the water or are ambush feeders. Each mode generates different hydrodynamic disturbances and hence exposes the grazers differently to mechanosensory predators. Ambush feeders sink slowly and therefore perform occasional upward repositioning jumps. We quantified the fluid disturbance generated by repositioning jumps in a millimetre-sized copepod (Re $ 40). The kick of the swimming legs generates a viscous vorte… Show more

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Cited by 64 publications
(97 citation statements)
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“…All of the jumping and swimming copepods in fact produce two such vortex rings ( Fig. 3 and Movies S2-S4) consistent with previous observations in different species (4,17,24), and the observed far field spatial attenuation of the flow (u ∼ r -4 ) is consistent with that predicted from the idealized impulsive stresslet model (Table 1). Thus, the rapid power strokes may be considered an adaptation to minimize the production of fluid signals.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 80%
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“…All of the jumping and swimming copepods in fact produce two such vortex rings ( Fig. 3 and Movies S2-S4) consistent with previous observations in different species (4,17,24), and the observed far field spatial attenuation of the flow (u ∼ r -4 ) is consistent with that predicted from the idealized impulsive stresslet model (Table 1). Thus, the rapid power strokes may be considered an adaptation to minimize the production of fluid signals.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 80%
“…The frequency of reposition jumps in copepods and ciliates is between 1.0 s −1 and 0.01 s −1 (28,29) (reviewed in ref. 4) with each jump lasting only a few milliseconds. The males of the copepod Oithona spp.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Some ambush predators, including snakes, fish and insects (Daniels, 1982;Cooper et al, 1985;Bailey, 1986;Formanowicz and Brodie, 1988;Alfaro, 2002;Bilcke et al, 2006;Hulbert et al, 2006;Ostrand et al, 2004;Sano and Kurokura, 2011) orient their bodies toward the prey so that they can strike quickly and accurately, while also minimizing disturbance to the water around them. Alternatively, some ambush predators, such as copepods that sit motionlessly in the water column to prevent detection by the prey (Kiørboe et al, 2010), are known to locate prey using hydrodynamic cues, which they then exploit to precisely time attacks (Jiang and Paffenhöfer, 2008). Upon striking, aquatic ambush predators must effectively manipulate their strikes so as not to push water, and therefore the prey, out of the range of attack.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%