A universal hydrodynamic transition in confined marine invertebrate larvae
Bikram D. Shrestha, Santhan Chandragiri, Christian D. Gibson, Nina R. Couture, Melissa Ruszczyk, and Vivek N. Prakash

TL;DR
This study reveals a universal pattern in the flow dynamics of marine larvae under confinement, showing how vortex formation scales with confinement and depends on morphology, supported by experiments and a theoretical model.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive hydrodynamic framework for low Reynolds number flows around complex-shaped larvae in confined environments, linking morphology to flow patterns.
Findings
Vortices around larvae increase with confinement
Universal flow pattern: two vortices under weak confinement, more under strong confinement
Theoretical model accurately predicts experimental flow behaviors
Abstract
The ocean is teeming with a myriad of mm-sized invertebrate planktonic larvae, which thrive in a viscous fluid environment. Many of them rely on ciliary beating to generate fluid flows for locomotion and feeding. Their larval forms, local morphologies, and ciliation patterns exhibit remarkable diversity, producing intricate and dynamic 3D flows that are notoriously difficult to characterize in laboratory settings. Traditional microscopic imaging techniques typically involve gently squeeze-confining the soft larvae between a glass slide and cover slip to study their flows in quasi-2D. However, a comprehensive hydrodynamic framework for the low-to-intermediate Reynolds number (<1) flows in quasi-2D confinement, particularly in light of their complex forms, has remained elusive. Here, we demonstrate that vortices around larvae proliferate with increasing confinement and illuminate the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAeolian processes and effects · Particle Dynamics in Fluid Flows
