School of Oceanography, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195-7940, USA.
Integr Comp Biol. 2012 Oct;52(4):458-69. doi: 10.1093/icb/ics092. Epub 2012 Jun 29.
Most planktonic larvae of marine invertebrates are denser than sea water, and rely on swimming to locate food, navigate advective currents, and avoid predators. Therefore, swimming behaviors play important roles in larval survival and dispersal. Larval bodies are often complex and highly variable across developmental stages and environmental conditions. These complex morphologies reflect compromises among multiple evolutionary pressures, including maintaining the ability to swim. Here, I highlight metrics of swimming performance, their relationships with morphology, and the roles of behavior in modulating larval swimming within biomechanical limits. Sand dollars have a representative larval morphology using long ciliated projections for swimming and feeding. Observed larval sand dollars fell within a narrow range of key morphological parameters that maximized their abilities to maintain directed upward movement over the most diverse flow fields, outperforming hypothetical alternatives in a numerical model. Ontogenetic changes in larval morphology also led to different vertical movements in simulated flow fields, implying stage-dependent vertical distributions and lateral transport. These model outcomes suggest a tight coupling between larval morphology and swimming. Environmental stressors, such as changes in temperature and pH, can therefore affect larval swimming through short-term behavioral adjustments and long-term changes in morphology. Larval sand dollars reared under elevated pCO(2) conditions had significantly different morphology, but not swimming speeds or trajectories. Geometric morphometric analysis showed a pH-dependent, size-mediated change in shape, suggesting a coordinated morphological adjustment to maintain swimming performance under acidified conditions. Quantification of the biomechanics and behavioral aspects of swimming improves predictions of larval survival and dispersal under present-day and future environmental conditions.
大多数海洋无脊椎动物的浮游幼虫密度大于海水,它们依靠游动来寻找食物、随平流移动以及躲避捕食者。因此,游动行为在幼虫的生存和扩散中起着重要作用。幼虫的身体在发育阶段和环境条件下通常是复杂且高度可变的。这些复杂的形态反映了多种进化压力之间的权衡,包括保持游动能力。在这里,我强调了游动性能的度量指标、它们与形态的关系,以及行为在调节幼虫在生物力学限制内游动中的作用。沙钱具有代表性的幼虫形态,使用长的纤毛突起来游泳和进食。观察到的幼虫沙钱落在关键形态参数的狭窄范围内,这些参数最大限度地提高了它们在最具异质性流场中向上定向运动的能力,在数值模型中超过了假设的替代方案。幼虫形态的个体发育变化也导致了模拟流场中不同的垂直运动,这意味着依赖于阶段的垂直分布和侧向迁移。这些模型结果表明幼虫形态和游动之间存在紧密的耦合。因此,环境胁迫因素,如温度和 pH 值的变化,可以通过短期行为调整和长期形态变化来影响幼虫的游动。在高 CO2 条件下饲养的幼虫沙钱具有明显不同的形态,但游动速度或轨迹没有变化。几何形态分析显示出 pH 依赖性、大小介导的形状变化,表明在酸化条件下进行了协调的形态调整以保持游动性能。游动的生物力学和行为方面的量化提高了在当前和未来环境条件下预测幼虫生存和扩散的能力。