Mi. Latz et J. Rohr, Luminescent response of the red tide dinoflagellate Lingulodinium polyedrum to laminar and turbulent flow, LIMN OCEAN, 44(6), 1999, pp. 1423-1435
While it is universally accepted that plankton continually experience a dyn
amic fluid environment, their sensitivity to the features of the surroundin
g flow field at the relevant length and time scales of the organism is poor
ly characterized. The present study uses bioluminescence as a tool to under
stand how the red tide dinoflagellate Lingulodinium polyedrum (= Gonyaulax
polyedra) responds to well-characterized hydrodynamic forces present in ful
ly developed laminar and turbulent pipe flow. The response of L. polyedrum
to hydrodynamic stimulation was best characterized by wall shear stress; at
similar values of wall shear stress, the response was similar for laminar
and turbulent flows.
The response threshold occurred in laminar flow at a wall shear stress of a
pproximately 0.3 N m(-2). At these low flow rates, video analysis of the ve
locity of flash trajectories revealed that responding cells were positioned
only near the pipe wall, where local shear stress levels were equal to or
greater than threshold. For cell concentrations ranging over four orders of
magnitude, threshold values of wall shear stress were restricted to a narr
ow range, consistent with an antipredation function for dinoflagellate biol
uminescence. For laminar flows with above-threshold wall shear stress value
s less than or equal to 1 N m(-2), mean bioluminescence increased with wall
shear stress according to a power (log-log) relationship, with the slope o
f the power function dependent on cell concentration. The increase in biolu
minescence within this range was due primarily to an increasing population
response rate and, to a lesser extent, an increase in maximum flash intensi
ty per cell and the increased flux of organisms with higher flow rates. For
wall shear stress levels > 1 N m(-2), the maximum intensity per cell remai
ned approximately constant with increasing wall shear stress, even as the f
low transitioned from laminar to turbulent, and the smallest turbulent leng
th scales became less than the average cell size.