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A biomechanical hypothesis explaining upstream movements by the freshwater snail Elimia
Author(s) -
HURYN A. D.,
DENNY M. W.
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
functional ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.272
H-Index - 154
eISSN - 1365-2435
pISSN - 0269-8463
DOI - 10.1046/j.1365-2435.1997.00116.x
Subject(s) - snail , biology , ecology , streams , gastropoda , upstream (networking) , invertebrate , drag , population , freshwater snail , movement (music) , physics , engineering , computer network , telecommunications , demography , sociology , computer science , thermodynamics , acoustics
1. Many taxa of freshwater invertebrates show active upstream movements, particularly the snails. Hypotheses explaining this behaviour invoke the search for food or space, compensation for drift, avoidance of predation and hydrodynamic effects. The pervasiveness of upstream movements among remote lineages of snails (two subclasses, three orders, 10 families), however, suggests that snails may move upstream for mechanical rather than adaptive reasons. 2. It is proposed that upstream movements by snails are a function of torque on the snail’s foot generated by hydrodynamic drag on the shell. When subject to high broadside drag‐forces on their shells, snails are able to reduce torque and stabilize orientation only by directing their anterior aspect upstream. 3. Movements of the freshwater pleurocerid snail Elimia were studied by following marked free‐ranging individuals in six streams in Alabama, USA (four species, eight populations). 4. Populations showed either no net movement (two streams) or significant upstream movements ranging to a mean of ≈40 m over a 3‐month period (four streams). Movement patterns were stream specific rather than species or population specific. Within populations showing significant upstream movements, snails with shell lengths ≤10 mm showed little net movement. Larger snails showed movements from 0 to >200 m upstream. 5. A torque‐constrained random walk model was used to perform a post hoc test of the hypothesis that upstream movements were a function of torque on the snail’s foot generated by hydrodynamic drag on the shell. The model predicted upstream and size‐dependent movement patterns that approximated those observed for snails in the field.

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