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Compensatory escape mechanism at low Reynolds number
Edited by Mimi A. R. Koehl, University of California, Berkeley, CA, and approved February 6, 2013 (received for review July 17, 2012)

Abstract
Despite high predation pressure, planktonic copepods remain one of the most abundant groups on the planet. Their escape response provides one of most effective mechanisms to maximize evolutionary fitness. Owing to their small size (100 µm) compared with their predators (>1 mm), increasing viscosity is believed to have detrimental effects on copepods’ fitness at lower temperature. Using high-speed digital holography we acquire 3D kinematics of the nauplius escape including both location and detailed appendage motion. By independently varying temperature and viscosity we demonstrate that at natural thermal extremes, contrary to conventional views, nauplii achieve equivalent escape distance while maintaining optimal velocity. Using experimental results and kinematic simulations from a resistive force theory propulsion model, we demonstrate that a shift in appendage timing creates an increase in power stroke duration relative to recovery stroke duration. This change allows the nauplius to limit losses in velocity and maintain distance during escapes at the lower bound of its natural thermal range. The shift in power stroke duration relative to recovery stroke duration is found to be regulated by the temperature dependence of swimming appendage muscle groups, not a dynamic response to viscosity change. These results show that copepod nauplii have natural adaptive mechanisms to compensate for viscosity variations with temperature but not in situations in which viscosity varies independent of temperature, such as in some phytoplankton blooms. Understanding the robustness of escapes in the wake of environmental changes such as temperature and viscosity has implications in assessing the future health of performance compensation.
Footnotes
↵1Present address: Whitman Center, Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, MA 02543.
- ↵2To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: bgemmell{at}mbl.edu.
↵3Present address: Mechanical Engineering Department, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, TX 79409.
Author contributions: B.J.G. and E.J.B. designed research; B.J.G. and J.S. performed research; J.S. contributed new reagents/analytic tools; B.J.G., J.S., and E.J.B. analyzed data; and B.J.G., J.S., and E.J.B. wrote the paper.
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
This article is a PNAS Direct Submission.
This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.1212148110/-/DCSupplemental.