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Autori principali: Sparks, David, Rajeev, Edwin, Koley, Subhra Shankha, Canestrelli, Alberto, Liao, James C
Natura: Artículo científico
Lingua:en
Pubblicazione: The Journal of experimental biology 2024
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Accesso online:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39635717/
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author Sparks, David
Rajeev, Edwin
Koley, Subhra Shankha
Canestrelli, Alberto
Liao, James C
author_facet Sparks, David
Rajeev, Edwin
Koley, Subhra Shankha
Canestrelli, Alberto
Liao, James C
Sparks, David
Rajeev, Edwin
Koley, Subhra Shankha
Canestrelli, Alberto
Liao, James C
collection PubMed - marine biology
contents Swimming kinematics of rainbow trout behind a 3×5 cylinder array: a computationally driven experimental approach to understanding fish locomotion. Sparks, David Rajeev, Edwin Koley, Subhra Shankha Canestrelli, Alberto Liao, James C Animals Oncorhynchus mykiss Biomechanical Phenomena Swimming Hydrodynamics Rheology Fish in the wild often contend with complex flows that are produced by natural and artificial structures. Research into fish interactions with turbulence often investigates metrics such as turbulent kinetic energy (TKE) or fish positional location, with less focus on the specific interactions between vortex organization and body swimming kinematics. Here, we compared the swimming kinematics of rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) holding station in flows produced by two different 3×5 cylinder arrays. We systematically utilized computational fluid dynamics to identify one array that produced a Kármán vortex street with high vortex periodicity (KVS array) and another that produced low periodicity, similar to a parallel vortex street (PVS array), both validated with particle image velocimetry. The only difference in swimming kinematics between cylinder arrays was an increased tail beat amplitude in the KVS array. In both cylinder arrays, the tail beat frequency decreased and snout amplitude increased compared with the freestream. The center of mass amplitude was greater in the PVS array than in only the freestream, however, suggesting some buffeting of the body by the fluid. Notably, we did not observe Kármán gaiting in the KVS array as in previous studies. We hypothesize that this is because (1) vorticity was dissipated in the region where fish held station or (2) vortices were in-line rather than staggered. These results are the first to quantify the kinematics and behavior of fishes swimming in the wake of multiple cylinder arrays, which has important implications for biomechanics, fluid dynamics and fisheries management.
format Artículo científico
id pubmed_39635717
institution PubMed
language en
publishDate 2024
publisher The Journal of experimental biology
record_format pubmed
spellingShingle Swimming kinematics of rainbow trout behind a 3×5 cylinder array: a computationally driven experimental approach to understanding fish locomotion.
Sparks, David
Rajeev, Edwin
Koley, Subhra Shankha
Canestrelli, Alberto
Liao, James C
Animals
Oncorhynchus mykiss
Biomechanical Phenomena
Swimming
Hydrodynamics
Rheology
Swimming kinematics of rainbow trout behind a 3×5 cylinder array: a computationally driven experimental approach to understanding fish locomotion. Sparks, David Rajeev, Edwin Koley, Subhra Shankha Canestrelli, Alberto Liao, James C Animals Oncorhynchus mykiss Biomechanical Phenomena Swimming Hydrodynamics Rheology Fish in the wild often contend with complex flows that are produced by natural and artificial structures. Research into fish interactions with turbulence often investigates metrics such as turbulent kinetic energy (TKE) or fish positional location, with less focus on the specific interactions between vortex organization and body swimming kinematics. Here, we compared the swimming kinematics of rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) holding station in flows produced by two different 3×5 cylinder arrays. We systematically utilized computational fluid dynamics to identify one array that produced a Kármán vortex street with high vortex periodicity (KVS array) and another that produced low periodicity, similar to a parallel vortex street (PVS array), both validated with particle image velocimetry. The only difference in swimming kinematics between cylinder arrays was an increased tail beat amplitude in the KVS array. In both cylinder arrays, the tail beat frequency decreased and snout amplitude increased compared with the freestream. The center of mass amplitude was greater in the PVS array than in only the freestream, however, suggesting some buffeting of the body by the fluid. Notably, we did not observe Kármán gaiting in the KVS array as in previous studies. We hypothesize that this is because (1) vorticity was dissipated in the region where fish held station or (2) vortices were in-line rather than staggered. These results are the first to quantify the kinematics and behavior of fishes swimming in the wake of multiple cylinder arrays, which has important implications for biomechanics, fluid dynamics and fisheries management.
title Swimming kinematics of rainbow trout behind a 3×5 cylinder array: a computationally driven experimental approach to understanding fish locomotion.
topic Animals
Oncorhynchus mykiss
Biomechanical Phenomena
Swimming
Hydrodynamics
Rheology
url https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39635717/