“…Some resolve to filter feeding, for example, choanoflagellates, some sessile nanoflagellates and ciliates (Sleigh, 1964;Fenchel, 1982Fenchel, , 1986Fenchel and Patterson, 1986;Pettitt et al, 2002), others are diffusion feeders that depend on prey swimming across the viscous boundary (Fenchel, 1984;Langlois et al, 2009) and others again have developed rather unique methods such as the toxic mucus traps of Alexandrium pseudogonyaulax (Blossom et al, 2012). Although interception feeding may be common among free-swimming flagellates (Fenchel, 1984), fluid dynamics have mostly been studied for sessile forms (Fenchel, 1982;Christensen-Dalsgaard and Fenchel, 2003), and our results are, to our knowledge, the first empirical quantification of the importance of feeding currents in free-swimming interception feeders.…”