Museum of Comparative Zoology, Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States of America.
Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey, United States of America.
PLoS Biol. 2024 Jun 6;22(6):e3002501. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3002501. eCollection 2024 Jun.
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.
节能的生态和进化效益源于动物运动的物理原理和生理机制。我们提出了一个关于洄游鱼类在湍流中可以通过躲避混沌的湍涡流的干扰来减少运动总能量成本的假设。我们通过量化巨丹鱼(Devario aequipinnatus)群体的能量学和运动学来验证这一假设,并将其与在层流和湍流条件下以广泛速度范围游泳的单个个体进行比较。我们发现,当以高速和高湍流水平游动时,与单个鱼相比,鱼群的总能量消耗(有氧和无氧能量)降低了 63%至 79%(例如,228 与 48 kj kg-1)。在较高速度下,单独的个体在湍流中游泳比在层流条件下多消耗约 22%的运动学努力(尾拍幅度•频率:1.7 与 1.4 BL s-1)。在湍流中游泳的鱼群将其三维群体体积减少了 41%至 68%(在较高速度下,约为 103 与 33 cm3),与层流条件相比,它们并没有改变运动学努力。这种显著的节能突显了群体行为可以通过将鱼类(在鱼群内)躲避具有足够动能的湍涡流来减轻湍流干扰,从而扰乱运动步态。因此,在密集流体环境中,提供一个更理想的内部水动力环境可能是群体行为的生态驱动因素之一。