2024
DOI: 10.1007/s00227-024-04555-7
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The epibiont Xenobalanus globicipitis indicates differences in swimming kinematics among cetaceans

Sofía Ten,
Francesca Fusar Poli,
Kenji Konishi
et al.

Abstract: Most research on cetacean swimming has been conducted on captive dolphins due to limited accessibility to wild cetaceans. Epibiotic barnacles have been used as indirect evidence of cetacean hydrodynamics, given their lifelong association with cetaceans and dependence on water flow. Previous studies suggested that the spatial distribution of the barnacle Xenobalanus globicipitis on the tail flukes of striped dolphins (i.e., higher load in the center and dorsal side) sheds light on dolphin hydrodynamics. The pre… Show more

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