BURROW VENTILATION IN THE TUBE-DWELLING SHRIMP CALLIANASSA-SUBTERRANEA (DECAPODA, THALASSINIDEA) - II - THE FLOW IN THE VICINITY OF THE SHRIMP AND THE ENERGETIC ADVANTAGES OF A LAMINAR NON-PULSATING VENTILATION CURRENT
Ej. Stamhuis et Jj. Videler, BURROW VENTILATION IN THE TUBE-DWELLING SHRIMP CALLIANASSA-SUBTERRANEA (DECAPODA, THALASSINIDEA) - II - THE FLOW IN THE VICINITY OF THE SHRIMP AND THE ENERGETIC ADVANTAGES OF A LAMINAR NON-PULSATING VENTILATION CURRENT, Journal of Experimental Biology, 201(14), 1998, pp. 2159-2170
The ventilation flow in the vicinity of the pleopod-pumping thalassini
d shrimp Callianassa subterranea in an artificial transparent burrow h
as been mapped using particle image velocimetry. The flow in the tube
in front of the shrimp was unidirectional, laminar and steady, with a
parabolic cross-sectional velocity profile. The mean flow velocity was
2.0+/-0.1 mm s(-1). The flow passed the thorax of the shrimp along th
e lateral and ventral sides. Ventral to the abdomen, the flow was domi
nated by the metachronally oscillating pleopods. The water around a pl
eopod is accelerated caudally and ventrally during the power stroke, a
nd decelerated to a much lesser extent during the recovery stroke owin
g to a reduction in pleopod area. On average, the flow ventral to the
abdomen converged towards the small opening underneath the telson, sim
ultaneously increasing in velocity. A jet with a core velocity of 18-2
0 mm s(-1) entered the area behind the shrimp from underneath the tels
on, This caused a separation zone with backflow caudal to the telson,
Owing to the high rates of shear, the jet diverged and re-adjusted to
a parabolic cross-sectional profile within 1-2 body lengths behind the
shrimp, showing no traces of pulsation. The metachronal pleopod movem
ents in combination with the increase in flow velocity at the constric
tion in the tube caused by the uropods and the telson probably prevent
ed pulsation, The energetic consequences of pulsating and steady flows
in combination with several tube configurations were evaluated. The r
esults suggested that, by constricting the tube and keeping the flow s
teady, C. subterranea saves on ventilation costs by a factor of up to
six compared with oscillatory flow in a tube without the tail-fan cons
triction.