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1.
PLoS Biol ; 22(6): e3002501, 2024 Jun.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38843284

RÉSUMÉ

The ecological and evolutionary benefits of energy-saving in collective behaviors are rooted in the physical principles and physiological mechanisms underpinning animal locomotion. We propose a turbulence sheltering hypothesis that collective movements of fish schools in turbulent flow can reduce the total energetic cost of locomotion by shielding individuals from the perturbation of chaotic turbulent eddies. We test this hypothesis by quantifying energetics and kinematics in schools of giant danio (Devario aequipinnatus) and compared that to solitary individuals swimming under laminar and turbulent conditions over a wide speed range. We discovered that, when swimming at high speeds and high turbulence levels, fish schools reduced their total energy expenditure (TEE, both aerobic and anaerobic energy) by 63% to 79% compared to solitary fish (e.g., 228 versus 48 kj kg-1). Solitary individuals spend approximately 22% more kinematic effort (tail beat amplitude•frequency: 1.7 versus 1.4 BL s-1) to swim in turbulence at higher speeds than in laminar conditions. Fish schools swimming in turbulence reduced their three-dimensional group volume by 41% to 68% (at higher speeds, approximately 103 versus 33 cm3) and did not alter their kinematic effort compared to laminar conditions. This substantial energy saving highlights that schooling behaviors can mitigate turbulent disturbances by sheltering fish (within schools) from the eddies of sufficient kinetic energy that can disrupt locomotor gaits. Therefore, providing a more desirable internal hydrodynamic environment could be one of the ecological drivers underlying collective behaviors in a dense fluid environment.


Sujet(s)
Métabolisme énergétique , Natation , Animaux , Natation/physiologie , Métabolisme énergétique/physiologie , Phénomènes biomécaniques , Comportement animal/physiologie , Locomotion/physiologie , Cyprinidae/physiologie , Hydrodynamique , Comportement social
2.
Integr Comp Biol ; 2024 Jun 07.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38849296

RÉSUMÉ

The scales and skin mucus of bony fishes are both proposed to have a role in beneficially modifying the hydrodynamics of water flow over the body surface. However, it has been challenging to provide direct experimental evidence that tests how mucus and fish scales change the boundary layer in part due to the difficulties in working with live animal tissue and difficulty directly imaging the boundary layer. In this manuscript we use direct imaging and flow tracking within the boundary layer to compare boundary layer dynamics over surfaces of fish skin with mucus, without mucus, and a flat control surface. Our direct measurements of boundary layer flows for these three different conditions are repeated for two different species, bluegill sunfish (Lepomis macrochirus) and blue tilapia (Oreochromis aureus). Our goals are to understand if mucus and scales reduce drag, shed light on mechanisms underlying drag reduction, compare these results between species, and evaluate the relative contributions to hydrodynamic function for both mucus and scales. We use our measurements of boundary layer flow to calculate shear stress (proportional to friction drag), and we find that mucus reduces drag overall by reducing the velocity gradient near the skin surface. Both bluegill and tilapia showed similar patterns of surface velocity reduction. We also note that scales alone do not appear to reduce drag, but that mucus may reduce friction drag up to 50% compared to scaled surfaces without mucus or flat controls.

3.
Integr Comp Biol ; 2024 May 17.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38760887

RÉSUMÉ

Understanding the flow physics behind fish schooling poses significant challenges due to the difficulties in directly measuring hydrodynamic performance and the three-dimensional, chaotic, and complex flow structures generated by collective moving organisms. Numerous previous simulations and experiments have utilized computational, mechanical, or robotic models to represent live fish. And existing studies of live fish schools have contributed significantly to dissecting the complexities of fish schooling. But the scarcity of combined approaches that include both computational and experimental studies, ideally of the same fish schools, has limited our ability to understand the physical factors that are involved in fish collective behavior. This underscores the necessity of developing new approaches to working directly with live fish schools. An integrated method that combines experiments on live fish schools with computational fluid dynamic (CFD) simulations represents an innovative method of studying the hydrodynamics of fish schooling. CFD techniques can deliver accurate performance measurements and high-fidelity flow characteristics for comprehensive analysis. Concurrently, experimental approaches can capture the precise locomotor kinematics of fish and offer additional flow information through particle image velocimetry (PIV) measurements, potentially enhancing the accuracy and efficiency of CFD studies via advanced data assimilation techniques. The flow patterns observed in PIV experiments with fish schools and the complex hydrodynamic interactions revealed by integrated analyses highlight the complexity of fish schooling, prompting a reevaluation of the classic Weihs model of school dynamics. The synergy between CFD models and experimental data grants us comprehensive insights into the flow dynamics of fish schools, facilitating the evaluation of their functional significance and enabling comparative studies of schooling behavior. In addition, we consider the challenges in developing integrated analytical methods and suggest promising directions for future research.

4.
Elife ; 122024 Feb 20.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38375853

RÉSUMÉ

Many animals moving through fluids exhibit highly coordinated group movement that is thought to reduce the cost of locomotion. However, direct energetic measurements demonstrating the energy-saving benefits of fluid-mediated collective movements remain elusive. By characterizing both aerobic and anaerobic metabolic energy contributions in schools of giant danio (Devario aequipinnatus), we discovered that fish schools have a concave upward shaped metabolism-speed curve, with a minimum metabolic cost at ~1 body length s-1. We demonstrate that fish schools reduce total energy expenditure (TEE) per tail beat by up to 56% compared to solitary fish. When reaching their maximum sustained swimming speed, fish swimming in schools had a 44% higher maximum aerobic performance and used 65% less non-aerobic energy compared to solitary individuals, which lowered the TEE and total cost of transport by up to 53%, near the lowest recorded for any aquatic organism. Fish in schools also recovered from exercise 43% faster than solitary fish. The non-aerobic energetic savings that occur when fish in schools actively swim at high speed can considerably improve both peak and repeated performance which is likely to be beneficial for evading predators. These energetic savings may underlie the prevalence of coordinated group locomotion in fishes.


Schools of fish, flocks of birds flying in a V-formation and other collective movements of animals are common and mesmerizing behaviours. Moving as a group can have many benefits including helping the animals to find food and reproduce and protecting them from predators. Collective movements may also help animals to save energy as they travel by altering the flow of air or water around individuals. Computational models based on the flow of water suggest several possible mechanisms for how fish swimming in schools may use less energy compared to fish swimming on their own. However, few studies have directly measured how much energy fish schools actually use while they swim compared to a solitary individual. Zhang and Lauder used a device called a respirometer to directly measure the energy used by small tropical fish, known as giant danio, swimming in schools and on their own in an aquatic treadmill. The experiments found that the fish swimming in schools used 53% less energy compared with fish swimming on their own, and that fish in schools recovered from a period of high-speed swimming 43% quicker than solitary fish. By adjusting the flow of the water in the tanks, the team were able to study the fish schools swimming at different speeds. This revealed that the fish used more energy when they hovered slowly, or swam fast, than when they swam at a more moderate speed. Previous studies have found that many fish tend to swim at a moderate speed of around one body length per second while they travel long distances. Zhang and Lauder found that the giant danio used the least energy when they swam at this 'migratory' speed. These findings show that swimming in schools can help fish save energy compared with swimming alone. Along with furthering our understanding of how collective movement benefits fish and other animals, this work may help engineers to design robots that can team up with other robots to move more efficiently through the water.


Sujet(s)
Poissons , Natation , Animaux , Phénomènes biophysiques , Métabolisme énergétique , Phénomènes biomécaniques
5.
Bioinspir Biomim ; 19(2)2024 Jan 24.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38211345

RÉSUMÉ

Fish coordinate the motion of their fins and body to create the time-varying forces required for swimming and agile maneuvers. To effectively adapt this biological strategy for underwater robots, it is necessary to understand how the location and coordination of interacting fish-like fins affect the production of propulsive forces. In this study, the impact that phase difference, horizontal and vertical spacing, and compliance of paired fins had on net thrust and lateral forces was investigated using two fish-like robotic swimmers and a series of computational fluid dynamic simulations. The results demonstrated that the propulsive forces created by pairs of fins that interact through wake flows are highly dependent on the fins' spacing and compliance. Changes to fin separation of less than one fin length had a dramatic effect on forces, and on the phase difference at which desired forces would occur. These findings have clear implications when designing multi-finned swimming robots. Well-designed, interacting fins can potentially produce several times more propulsive force than a poorly tuned robot with seemingly small differences in the kinematic, geometric, and mechanical properties.


Sujet(s)
Robotique , Animaux , Nageoires animales , Natation , Phénomènes biomécaniques , Déplacement
6.
J Exp Biol ; 226(23)2023 12 01.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37947155

RÉSUMÉ

The vertebrate immune system provides an impressively effective defense against parasites and pathogens. However, these benefits must be balanced against a range of costly side-effects including energy loss and risks of auto-immunity. These costs might include biomechanical impairment of movement, but little is known about the intersection between immunity and biomechanics. Here, we show that a fibrosis immune response to Schistocephalus solidus infection in freshwater threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) has collateral effects on their locomotion. Although fibrosis is effective at reducing infection, some populations of stickleback actively suppress this immune response, possibly because the costs of fibrosis outweigh the benefits. We quantified the locomotor effects of the fibrosis immune response in the absence of parasites to investigate whether there are incidental costs of fibrosis that could help explain why some fish forego this effective defense. To do this, we induced fibrosis in stickleback and then tested their C-start escape performance. Additionally, we measured the severity of fibrosis, body stiffness and body curvature during the escape response. We were able to estimate performance costs of fibrosis by including these variables as intermediates in a structural equation model. This model revealed that among control fish without fibrosis, there is a performance cost associated with increased body stiffness. However, fish with fibrosis did not experience this cost but rather displayed increased performance with higher fibrosis severity. This result demonstrates that the adaptive landscape of immune responses can be complex with the potential for wide-reaching and unexpected fitness consequences.


Sujet(s)
Cestoda , Infections à cestodes , Maladies des poissons , Parasites , Smegmamorpha , Animaux , Maladies des poissons/parasitologie , Poissons , Cestoda/physiologie , Immunité , Interactions hôte-parasite , Infections à cestodes/parasitologie
7.
J Exp Biol ; 226(20)2023 10 15.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37905670

RÉSUMÉ

The collective directional movement of animals occurs over both short distances and longer migrations, and is a critical aspect of feeding, reproduction and the ecology of many species. Despite the implications of collective motion for lifetime fitness, we know remarkably little about its energetics. It is commonly thought that collective animal motion saves energy: moving alone against fluid flow is expected to be more energetically expensive than moving in a group. Energetic conservation resulting from collective movement is most often inferred from kinematic metrics or from computational models. However, the direct measurement of total metabolic energy savings during collective motion compared with solitary movement over a range of speeds has yet to be documented. In particular, longer duration and higher speed collective motion must involve both aerobic and non-aerobic (high-energy phosphate stores and substrate-level phosphorylation) metabolic energy contributions, and yet no study to date has quantified both types of metabolic contribution in comparison to locomotion by solitary individuals. There are multiple challenging questions regarding the energetics of collective motion in aquatic, aerial and terrestrial environments that remain to be answered. We focus on aquatic locomotion as a model system to demonstrate that understanding the energetics and total cost of collective movement requires the integration of biomechanics, fluid dynamics and bioenergetics to unveil the hydrodynamic and physiological phenomena involved and their underlying mechanisms.


Sujet(s)
Mouvement , Vertébrés , Humains , Animaux , Vertébrés/physiologie , Locomotion/physiologie , Déplacement , Phénomènes biomécaniques , Métabolisme énergétique/physiologie
8.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Jun 26.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37425734

RÉSUMÉ

The vertebrate immune system provides an impressively effective defense against parasites and pathogens. However, these benefits must be balanced against a range of costly side-effects including energy loss and risks of auto-immunity. These costs might include biomechanical impairment of movement, but little is known about the intersection between immunity and biomechanics. Here, we show that a fibrosis immune response in threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) has collateral effects on their locomotion. When freshwater stickleback are infected with the tapeworm parasite Schistocephalus solidus, they face an array of fitness consequences ranging from impaired body condition and fertility to an increased risk of mortality. To fight the infection, some stickleback will initiate a fibrosis immune response in which they produce excess collagenous tissue in their coelom. Although fibrosis is effective at reducing infection, some populations of stickleback actively suppress this immune response, possibly because the costs of fibrosis outweigh the benefits. Here we quantify the locomotor effects of the fibrosis immune response in the absence of parasites to investigate whether there are collateral costs of fibrosis that could help explain why some fish forego this effective defense. To do this, we induce fibrosis in stickleback and then test their C-start escape performance. Additionally, we measure the severity of fibrosis, body stiffness, and body curvature during the escape response. We were able to estimate performance costs of fibrosis by including these variables as intermediates in a structural equation model. This model reveals that among control fish without fibrosis, there is a performance cost associated with increased body stiffness. However, fish with fibrosis did not experience this cost but rather displayed increased performance with higher fibrosis severity. This result demonstrates that the adaptive landscape of immune responses can be complex with the potential for wide reaching and unexpected fitness consequences.

9.
Integr Comp Biol ; 63(3): 843-859, 2023 09 15.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37422435

RÉSUMÉ

To understand the complexities of morphological evolution, we must understand the relationships between genes, morphology, performance, and fitness in complex traits. Genomicists have made tremendous progress in finding the genetic basis of many phenotypes, including a myriad of morphological characters. Similarly, field biologists have greatly advanced our understanding of the relationship between performance and fitness in natural populations. However, the connection from morphology to performance has primarily been studied at the interspecific level, meaning that in most cases we lack a mechanistic understanding of how evolutionarily relevant variation among individuals affects organismal performance. Therefore, functional morphologists need methods that will allow for the analysis of fine-grained intraspecific variation in order to close the path from genes to fitness. We suggest three methodological areas that we believe are well suited for this research program and provide examples of how each can be applied within fish model systems to build our understanding of microevolutionary processes. Specifically, we believe that structural equation modeling, biological robotics, and simultaneous multi-modal functional data acquisition will open up fruitful collaborations among biomechanists, evolutionary biologists, and field biologists. It is only through the combined efforts of all three fields that we will understand the connection between evolution (acting at the level of genes) and natural selection (acting on fitness).


Sujet(s)
Évolution biologique , Conditionnement physique d'animal , Animaux , Sélection génétique , Phénotype , Poissons
10.
Integr Comp Biol ; 2022 May 19.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35588062

RÉSUMÉ

Fish display a versatile array of swimming patterns, and frequently demonstrate the ability to switch between these patterns altering kinematics as necessary. Many hard and soft robotic systems have sought to understand a variety of aspects pertaining to undulatory swimming, but most have been built to focus solely on a subset of those swimming patterns. We have expanded upon a previous soft robotic model, the pneufish, so that it can now simulate a variety of swimming patterns, much like a real fish. We explore the performance space available for this longer soft robotic model, which we call the quad-pneufish, with particular attention to the effects on lateral forces and z-torques produced during locomotion. We show that the quad-pneufish is capable of achieving a variety of midline patterns - including more realistic, fish-like patterns - and introducing a slight amount of co-activation between the left and right sides maintains forward thrust while decreasing lateral forces, indicating an increase in swimming efficiency. Robotic systems that are capable of producing an array of swimming movement patterns hold promise as experimental platforms for studying the diversity of fish locomotor patterns.

11.
Integr Comp Biol ; 2022 Apr 18.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35435223

RÉSUMÉ

Comparative biologists have typically used one or more of the following methods to assist in evaluating the proposed functional and performance significance of individual traits: comparative phylogenetic analysis, direct interspecific comparison among species, genetic modification, experimental alteration of morphology (for example by surgically modifying traits), and ecological manipulation where individual organisms are transplanted to a different environment. But comparing organisms as the endpoints of an evolutionary process involves the ceteris paribus assumption: that all traits other than the one(s) of interest are held constant. In a properly controlled experimental study, only the variable of interest changes among the groups being compared. The theme of this paper is that the use of robotic or mechanical models offers an additional tool in comparative biology that helps to minimize the effect of uncontrolled variables by allowing direct manipulation of the trait of interest against a constant background. The structure and movement pattern of mechanical devices can be altered in ways not possible in studies of living animals, facilitating testing hypotheses of the functional and performance significant of individual traits. Robotic models of organismal design are particularly useful in three arenas: (1) controlling variation to allow modification only of the trait of interest, (2) the direct measurement of energetic costs of individual traits, and (3) quantification of the performance landscape. Obtaining data in these three areas is extremely difficult through the study of living organisms alone, and the use of robotic models can reveal unexpected effects. Controlling for all variables except for the length of a swimming flexible object reveals substantial non-linear effects that vary with stiffness. Quantification of the swimming performance surface reveals that there are two peaks with comparable efficiency, greatly complicating the inference of performance from morphology alone. Organisms and their ecological interactions are complex, and dissecting this complexity to understand the effects of individual traits is a grand challenge in ecology and evolutionary biology. Robotics has great promise as a "comparative method," allowing better-controlled comparative studies to analyze the many interacting elements that make up complex behaviors, ecological interactions, and evolutionary histories.

12.
Bioinspir Biomim ; 17(4)2022 05 24.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35487201

RÉSUMÉ

Many aquatic animals swim by undulatory body movements and understanding the diversity of these movements could unlock the potential for designing better underwater robots. Here, we analyzed the steady swimming kinematics of a diverse group of fish species to investigate whether their undulatory movements can be represented using a series of interconnected multi-segment models, and if so, to identify the key factors driving the segment configuration of the models. Our results show that the steady swimming kinematics of fishes can be described successfully using parsimonious models, 83% of which had fewer than five segments. In these models, the anterior segments were significantly longer than the posterior segments, and there was a direct link between segment configuration and swimming kinematics, body shape, and Reynolds number. The models representing eel-like fishes with elongated bodies and fishes swimming at high Reynolds numbers had more segments and less segment length variability along the body than the models representing other fishes. These fishes recruited their anterior bodies to a greater extent, initiating the undulatory wave more anteriorly. Two shape parameters, related to axial and overall body thickness, predicted segment configuration with moderate to high success rate. We found that head morphology was a good predictor of its segment length. While there was a large variation in head segments, the length of tail segments was similar across all models. Given that fishes exhibited variable caudal fin shapes, the consistency of tail segments could be a result of an evolutionary constraint tuned for high propulsive efficiency. The bio-inspired multi-segment models presented in this study highlight the key bending points along the body and can be used to decide on the placement of actuators in fish-inspired robots, to model hydrodynamic forces in theoretical and computational studies, or for predicting muscle activation patterns during swimming.


Sujet(s)
Poissons , Natation , Animaux , Évolution biologique , Phénomènes biomécaniques/physiologie , Poissons/physiologie , Hydrodynamique , Natation/physiologie
13.
Science ; 375(6581): 639-647, 2022 02 11.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35143298

RÉSUMÉ

Biohybrid systems have been developed to better understand the design principles and coordination mechanisms of biological systems. We consider whether two functional regulatory features of the heart-mechanoelectrical signaling and automaticity-could be transferred to a synthetic analog of another fluid transport system: a swimming fish. By leveraging cardiac mechanoelectrical signaling, we recreated reciprocal contraction and relaxation in a muscular bilayer construct where each contraction occurs automatically as a response to the stretching of an antagonistic muscle pair. Further, to entrain this closed-loop actuation cycle, we engineered an electrically autonomous pacing node, which enhanced spontaneous contraction. The biohybrid fish equipped with intrinsic control strategies demonstrated self-sustained body-caudal fin swimming, highlighting the role of feedback mechanisms in muscular pumps such as the heart and muscles.


Sujet(s)
Phénomènes biomécaniques , Contraction musculaire , Muscles/physiologie , Myocytes cardiaques/physiologie , Nageoires animales/physiologie , Animaux , Biomimétique , Biophysique , Poissons/physiologie , Humains , Robotique , Natation , Ingénierie tissulaire
14.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 118(49)2021 12 07.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34853171

RÉSUMÉ

Fishes exhibit an astounding diversity of locomotor behaviors from classic swimming with their body and fins to jumping, flying, walking, and burrowing. Fishes that use their body and caudal fin (BCF) during undulatory swimming have been traditionally divided into modes based on the length of the propulsive body wave and the ratio of head:tail oscillation amplitude: anguilliform, subcarangiform, carangiform, and thunniform. This classification was first proposed based on key morphological traits, such as body stiffness and elongation, to group fishes based on their expected swimming mechanics. Here, we present a comparative study of 44 diverse species quantifying the kinematics and morphology of BCF-swimming fishes. Our results reveal that most species we studied share similar oscillation amplitude during steady locomotion that can be modeled using a second-degree order polynomial. The length of the propulsive body wave was shorter for species classified as anguilliform and longer for those classified as thunniform, although substantial variability existed both within and among species. Moreover, there was no decrease in head:tail amplitude from the anguilliform to thunniform mode of locomotion as we expected from the traditional classification. While the expected swimming modes correlated with morphological traits, they did not accurately represent the kinematics of BCF locomotion. These results indicate that even fish species differing as substantially in morphology as tuna and eel exhibit statistically similar two-dimensional midline kinematics and point toward unifying locomotor hydrodynamic mechanisms that can serve as the basis for understanding aquatic locomotion and controlling biomimetic aquatic robots.


Sujet(s)
Poissons/anatomie et histologie , Poissons/physiologie , Natation/physiologie , Nageoires animales/anatomie et histologie , Animaux , Biodiversité , Phénomènes biomécaniques/physiologie , Comportement coopératif , Poissons/classification , Hydrodynamique , Locomotion/physiologie , Spécificité d'espèce
16.
Bioinspir Biomim ; 16(4)2021 09 08.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34015781

RÉSUMÉ

Fish median fins are extremely diverse, but their function is not yet fully understood. Various biological studies on fish and engineering studies on flapping foils have revealed that there are hydrodynamic interactions between fins arranged in tandem and that these interactions can lead to improved performance by the posterior fin. This performance improvement is often driven by the augmentation of a leading-edge vortex on the trailing fin. Past experimental studies have necessarily simplified fish anatomy to enable more detailed engineering analyses, but such simplifications then do not capture the complexities of an undulating fish-like body with fins attached. We present a flexible fish-like robotic model that better represents the kinematics of swimming fishes while still being simple enough to examine a range of morphologies and motion patterns. We then create statistical models that predict the individual effects of each kinematic and morphological variable. Our results demonstrate that having fins arranged in tandem on an undulating body can lead to more steady production of thrust forces determined by the distance between the fins and their relative motion. We find that these same variables also affect swimming speed. Specifically, when swimming at high frequencies, self-propelled speed decreases by 12%-26% due to out of phase fin motion. Flow visualization reveals that variation within this range is caused in part by fin-fin flow interactions that affect leading edge vortices. Our results indicate that undulatory swimmers should optimize both the positioning and relative motion of their median fins in order to reduce force oscillations and improve overall performance while swimming.


Sujet(s)
Nageoires animales , Biomimétique , Animaux , Phénomènes biomécaniques , Poissons , Hydrodynamique , Natation
17.
Integr Comp Biol ; 61(2): 398-413, 2021 09 08.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33881525

RÉSUMÉ

Secondary aquatic vertebrates exhibit a diversity of swimming modes that use paired limbs and/or the tail. Various secondarily aquatic tetrapod clades, including amphibians, reptiles, and mammals use transverse undulations or oscillations of the tail for swimming. These movements have often been classified according to a kinematic gradient that was established for fishes but may not be appropriate to describe the swimming motions of tetrapods. To understand the evolution of movements and design of the tail in aquatic tetrapods, we categorize the types of tails used for swimming and examine swimming kinematics and hydrodynamics. From a foundation of a narrow, elongate ancestral tail, the tails used for swimming by aquatic tetrapods are classified as tapered, keeled, paddle, and lunate. Tail undulations are associated with tapered, keeled, and paddle tails for a diversity of taxa. Propulsive undulatory waves move down the tail with increasing amplitude toward the tail tip, while moving posteriorly at a velocity faster than the anterior motion of the body indicating that the tail is used for thrust generation. Aquatic propulsion is associated with the transfer of momentum to the water from the swimming movements of the tail, particularly at the trailing edge. The addition of transverse extensions and flattening of the tail increases the mass of water accelerated posteriorly and affects vorticity shed into the wake for more aquatically adapted animals. Digital Particle Image Velocimetry reveals that the differences were exhibited in the vortex wake between the morphological and kinematic extremes of the alligator with a tapering undulating tail and the dolphin with oscillating wing-like flukes that generate thrust. In addition to exploring the relationship between the shape of undulating tails and the swimming performance across aquatic tetrapods, the role of tail reduction or loss of a tail in aquatic-tetrapod swimming was also explored. For aquatic tetrapods, the reduction would have been due to factors including locomotor and defensive specializations and phylogenetic and physiological constraints. Possession of a thrust-generating tail for swimming, or lack thereof, guided various lineages of secondarily aquatic vertebrates into different evolutionary trajectories for effective aquatic propulsion (i.e., speed, efficiency, and acceleration).


Sujet(s)
Organismes aquatiques , Natation , Queue , Animaux , Évolution biologique , Phénomènes biomécaniques , Hydrodynamique , Phylogenèse , Queue/anatomie et histologie
18.
Proc Biol Sci ; 288(1945): 20202726, 2021 02 24.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33593180

RÉSUMÉ

Fish routinely accelerate during locomotor manoeuvres, yet little is known about the dynamics of acceleration performance. Thunniform fish use their lunate caudal fin to generate lift-based thrust during steady swimming, but the lift is limited during acceleration from rest because required oncoming flows are slow. To investigate what other thrust-generating mechanisms occur during this behaviour, we used the robotic system termed Tunabot Flex, which is a research platform featuring yellowfin tuna-inspired body and tail profiles. We generated linear accelerations from rest of various magnitudes (maximum acceleration of [Formula: see text] at [Formula: see text] tail beat frequency) and recorded instantaneous electrical power consumption. Using particle image velocimetry data, we quantified body kinematics and flow patterns to then compute surface pressures, thrust forces and mechanical power output along the body through time. We found that the head generates net drag and that the posterior body generates significant thrust, which reveals an additional propulsion mechanism to the lift-based caudal fin in this thunniform swimmer during linear accelerations from rest. Studying fish acceleration performance with an experimental platform capable of simultaneously measuring electrical power consumption, kinematics, fluid flow and mechanical power output provides a new opportunity to understand unsteady locomotor behaviours in both fishes and bioinspired aquatic robotic systems.


Sujet(s)
Hydrodynamique , Robotique , Accélération , Phénomènes biomécaniques , Natation
19.
Bioinspir Biomim ; 16(4)2021 05 11.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33513591

RÉSUMÉ

Fish benefit energetically when swimming in groups, which is reflected in lower tail-beat frequencies for maintaining a given speed. Recent studies further show that fish save the most energy when swimming behind their neighbor such that both the leader and the follower benefit. However, the mechanisms underlying such hydrodynamic advantages have thus far not been established conclusively. The long-standing drafting hypothesis-reduction of drag forces by judicious positioning in regions of reduced oncoming flow-fails to explain advantages of in-line schooling described in this work. We present an alternate hypothesis for the hydrodynamic benefits of in-line swimming based on enhancement of propulsive thrust. Specifically, we show that an idealized school consisting of in-line pitching foils gains hydrodynamic benefits via two mechanisms that are rooted in the undulatory jet leaving the leading foil and impinging on the trailing foil: (i) leading-edge suction on the trailer foil, and (ii) added-mass push on the leader foil. Our results demonstrate that the savings in power can reach as high as 70% for a school swimming in a compact arrangement. Informed by these findings, we designed a modification of the tail propulsor that yielded power savings of up to 56% in a self-propelled autonomous swimming robot. Our findings provide insights into hydrodynamic advantages of fish schooling, and also enable bioinspired designs for significantly more efficient propulsion systems that can harvest some of their energy left in the flow.


Sujet(s)
Hydrodynamique , Modèles biologiques , Animaux , Phénomènes biomécaniques , Poissons , Natation
20.
Bioinspir Biomim ; 16(2)2021 03 05.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32927442

RÉSUMÉ

Tunas are flexible, high-performance open ocean swimmers that operate at high frequencies to achieve high swimming speeds. Most fish-like robotic systems operate at low frequencies (≤3 Hz) resulting in low swim speeds (≤1.5 body lengths per second), and the cost of transport (COT) is often one to four orders of magnitude higher than that of tunas. Furthermore, the impact of body flexibility on high-performance fish swimming remains unknown. Here we design and test a research platform based on yellowfin tuna (Thunnus albacares) to investigate the role of body flexibility and to close the performance gap between robotic and biological systems. This single-motor platform, termed Tunabot Flex, measures 25.5 cm in length. Flexibility is varied through joints in the tail to produce three tested configurations. We find that increasing body flexibility improves self-propelled swimming speeds on average by 0.5 body lengths per second while reducing the minimum COT by 53%. The most flexible configuration swims 4.60 body lengths per second with a tail beat frequency of 8.0 Hz and a COT measuring 18.4 J kg-1m-1. We then compare these results in addition to the midline kinematics, stride length, and Strouhal number with yellowfin tuna data. The COT of Tunabot Flex's most flexible configuration is less than a half-order of magnitude greater than that of yellowfin tuna across all tested speeds. Tunabot Flex provides a new baseline for the development of future bio-inspired underwater vehicles that aim to explore a fish-like, high-performance space and close the gap between engineered robotic systems and fish swimming ability.


Sujet(s)
Matériaux biomimétiques , Robotique , Natation , Animaux , Phénomènes biomécaniques , Thon
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