Peterman David J, Ritterbush Kathleen A
Department of Geology and Geophysics, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, United States.
PeerJ. 2021 Jul 16;9:e11797. doi: 10.7717/peerj.11797. eCollection 2021.
Measuring locomotion tactics available to ancient sea animals can link functional morphology with evolution and ecology over geologic timescales. Externally-shelled cephalopods are particularly important for their central roles in marine trophic exchanges, but most fossil taxa lack sufficient modern analogues for comparison. In particular, phylogenetically diverse cephalopods produced orthoconic conchs (straight shells) repeatedly through time. Persistent re-evolution of this morphotype suggests that it possesses adaptive value. Practical lateral propulsion is ruled out as an adaptive driver among orthoconic cephalopods due to the stable, vertical orientations of taxa lacking sufficient counterweights. However, this constraint grants the possibility of rapid (or at least efficient) vertical propulsion. We experiment with this form of movement using 3D-printed models of , weighted to mimic hydrostatic properties inferred by virtual models. Furthermore, model buoyancy was manipulated to impart simulated thrust within four independent scenarios (-like cruising thrust; a similar thrust scaled by the mantle cavity of ; sustained peak -like thrust; and passive, slightly negative buoyancy). Each model was monitored underwater with two submerged cameras as they rose/fell over ~2 m, and their kinematics were computed with 3D motion tracking. Our results demonstrate that orthocones require very low input thrust for high output in movement and velocity. With -like peak thrust, the model reaches velocities of 1.2 m/s (2.1 body lengths per second) within one second starting from a static initial condition. While cephalopods with orthoconic conchs likely assumed a variety of life habits, these experiments illuminate some first-order constraints. Low hydrodynamic drag inferred by vertical displacement suggests that vertical migration would incur very low metabolic cost. While these cephalopods likely assumed low energy lifestyles day-to-day, they may have had a fighting chance to escape from larger, faster predators by performing quick, upward dodges. The current experiments suggest that orthocones sacrifice horizontal mobility and maneuverability in exchange for highly streamlined, vertically-stable, upwardly-motile conchs.
测量古代海洋动物的运动策略可以在地质时间尺度上把功能形态学与进化和生态学联系起来。具有外部壳的头足类动物在海洋营养交换中扮演着核心角色,因而尤为重要,但大多数化石分类群缺乏足够的现代类似物用于比较。特别是,系统发育上多样的头足类动物在不同时期反复产生了直锥形螺壳(直壳)。这种形态类型的持续重新进化表明它具有适应性价值。由于缺乏足够配重的分类群具有稳定的垂直方向,实用的侧向推进被排除在直锥形头足类动物的适应性驱动因素之外。然而,这种限制使得快速(或至少高效)垂直推进成为可能。我们使用3D打印模型对这种运动形式进行实验,这些模型经过加权以模拟虚拟模型推断出的流体静力学特性。此外,在四个独立场景中操纵模型浮力以施加模拟推力(类似巡航推力;由的外套腔缩放的类似推力;持续的类似峰值推力;以及被动的、略负的浮力)。每个模型在水下由两个水下摄像机进行监测,当它们在约2米的范围内上升/下降时,用3D运动跟踪计算它们的运动学。我们的结果表明,直锥形头足类动物在运动和速度方面实现高输出只需要非常低的输入推力。在类似峰值推力的情况下,模型从静态初始条件开始,在一秒内达到1.2米/秒的速度(每秒2.1个体长)。虽然具有直锥形螺壳的头足类动物可能具有多种生活习性,但这些实验揭示了一些一阶限制。垂直位移推断出的低流体动力阻力表明垂直迁移将产生非常低的代谢成本。虽然这些头足类动物可能日常采取低能量的生活方式,但它们可能有机会通过快速向上躲避来逃离更大、更快的捕食者。当前的实验表明,直锥形头足类动物牺牲了水平移动性和机动性,以换取高度流线型、垂直稳定、向上移动的螺壳。