Metachronal waves in concentrations of swimming Turbatrix aceti nematodes and an oscillator chain model for their coordinated motions
A. C. Quillen, A. Peshkov, Esteban Wright, Sonia McGaffigan

TL;DR
This study investigates the collective metachronal waves in high-density populations of vinegar eels and introduces an oscillator chain model that captures their coordinated motion and wave properties.
Contribution
It presents a novel oscillator chain model that explains the emergence of metachronal waves in swimming nematodes and matches observed wave characteristics.
Findings
Metachronal waves occur at lower frequencies than individual eels.
A directed chain model reproduces observed wave wavelengths and frequencies.
The model predicts body shapes and reduces close interactions along eels.
Abstract
At high concentration, free swimming nematodes known as vinegar eels ({\it Turbatrix aceti}), collectively exhibit metachronal waves near a boundary. We find that the frequency of the collective traveling wave is lower than that of the freely swimming organisms. We explore models based on a chain of oscillators with nearest neighbor interactions that inhibit oscillator phase velocity. The phase of each oscillator represents the phase of the motion of the eel's head back and forth about its mean position. A strongly interacting directed chain model mimicking steric repulsion between organisms robustly gives traveling wave states and can approximately match the observed wavelength and oscillation frequency of the observed traveling wave. We predict body shapes assuming that waves propagate down the eel body at a constant speed. The phase oscillator model that impedes eel head overlaps…
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