The hydrodynamic effects of shape and size change during reconfiguration of a flexible macroalga

Rocky intertidal organisms experience large hydrodynamic forces due to high water velocities created by breaking waves. Flexible organisms, like macroalgae, often experience lower drag than rigid organisms because their shape and size change as velocity increases. This phenomenon, known as reconfigu...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of experimental biology 2006-05, Vol.209 (Pt 10), p.1894-1903
Hauptverfasser: Boller, Michael L, Carrington, Emily
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Rocky intertidal organisms experience large hydrodynamic forces due to high water velocities created by breaking waves. Flexible organisms, like macroalgae, often experience lower drag than rigid organisms because their shape and size change as velocity increases. This phenomenon, known as reconfiguration, has been previously quantified as Vogel's E, a measure of the relationship between velocity and drag. While this method is very useful for comparing reconfiguration among organisms it does not address the mechanisms of reconfiguration, and its application to predicting drag is problematic. The purpose of this study was twofold: (1) to examine the mechanisms of reconfiguration by quantifying the change in shape and size of a macroalga in flow and (2) to build a mechanistic model of drag for reconfiguring organisms. Drag, frontal area and shape of the intertidal alga Chondrus crispus were measured simultaneously in a recirculating flume at water velocities from 0 to approximately 2 m s(-1). Reconfiguration was due to two separate mechanisms: whole-alga realignment (deflection of the stipe) at low velocities (
ISSN:0022-0949
1477-9145
DOI:10.1242/jeb.02225