Optimal Feeding of Swimming and Attached Ciliates
Jingyi Liu, Yi Man, John H. Costello, and Eva Kanso

TL;DR
This study investigates how ciliates optimize their feeding strategies by adjusting surface motions depending on nutrient advection conditions, revealing different optimal behaviors for attached and swimming microorganisms.
Contribution
It introduces a model analyzing optimal ciliary surface velocities for nutrient uptake, showing dependence on Péclet number and contrasting behaviors for attached versus swimming ciliates.
Findings
Optimal feeding depends on Péclet number.
Swimming ciliates use treadmill motion at finite Pe.
Attached ciliates switch from treadmill to dipolar motion at high Pe.
Abstract
Ciliated microorganisms near the base of the aquatic food chain either swim to encounter prey or attach at a substrate and generate feeding currents to capture passing particles. Here, we represent attached and swimming ciliates using a popular spherical model in viscous fluid with slip surface velocity that afford analytical expressions of ciliary flows. We solve an advection-diffusion equation for the concentration of dissolved nutrients, where the P'eclet number (Pe) reflects the ratio of diffusive to advective time scales. For a fixed hydrodynamic power expenditure, we ask what ciliary surface velocities maximize nutrient flux at the microorganism's surface. We find that surface motions that optimize feeding depend on Pe. For freely swimming microorganisms at finite Pe, it is optimal to swim by employing a "treadmill" surface motion, but in the limit of large Pe, there is no…
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Taxonomy
TopicsModular Robots and Swarm Intelligence · Protist diversity and phylogeny · Micro and Nano Robotics
