Authors
Salvatore Lovecchio, Eric Climent, Roman Stocker, William M Durham
Publication date
2019/10/16
Journal
Science advances
Volume
5
Issue
10
Pages
eaaw7879
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Description
Many species of motile phytoplankton can actively form long multicellular chains by remaining attached to one another after cell division. While chains swim more rapidly than single cells of the same species, chain formation also markedly reduces phytoplankton’s ability to maintain their bearing. This suggests that turbulence, which acts to randomize swimming direction, could sharply attenuate a chain’s ability to migrate between well-lit surface waters during the day and deeper nutrient-rich waters at night. Here, we use numerical models to investigate how chain formation affects the migration of phytoplankton through a turbulent water column. Unexpectedly, we find that the elongated shape of chains helps them travel through weak to moderate turbulence much more effectively than single cells, and isolate the physical processes that confer chains this ability. Our findings provide a new mechanistic understanding …
Total citations
2019202020212022202320241471994
Scholar articles