首页> 外文期刊>The Journal of Experimental Biology >Stroke patterns and regulation of swim speed and energy cost in free-ranging Brunnich's guillemots
【24h】

Stroke patterns and regulation of swim speed and energy cost in free-ranging Brunnich's guillemots

机译:自由泳布鲁内奇海雀的行程模式以及游泳速度和能量成本的调节

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例
       

摘要

Loggers were attached to free-ranging Brunnich's guillemots Uria lomvia during dives, to measure swim speeds, body angles, stroke rates, stroke and glide durations, and acceleration patterns within strokes, and the data were used to model the mechanical costs of propelling the body fuselage (head and trunk excluding wings). During vertical dives to 102-135 m, guillemots regulated their speed during descent and much of ascent to about 1.6 +/- 0.2 m s(-1). Stroke rate declined very gradually with depth, with little or no gliding between strokes. Entire strokes from 2 m to 20 m depth had similar forward thrust on upstroke vs downstroke, whereas at deeper depths and during horizontal swimming there was much greater thrust on the downstroke. Despite this distinct transition, these differences had small effect (<6%) on our estimates of mechanical cost to propel the body fuselage, which did not include drag of the wings. Work stroke(-1) was quite high as speed increased dramatically in the first 5 m of descent against high buoyancy. Thereafter, speed and associated drag increased gradually as buoyancy slowly declined, so that mechancal work stroke(-1) during the rest of descent stayed relatively constant. Similar work stroke(-1) was maintained during non-pursuit swimming at the bottom, and during powered ascent to the depth of neutral buoyancy (about 71 m). Even with adjustments in respiratory air volume of +/- 60%, modeled work against buoyancy was important mainly in the top 15 m of descent, after which almost all work was against drag. Drag was in fact underestimated, as our values did not include enhancement of drag by altered flow around active swimmers. With increasing buoyancy during ascent above 71 m, stroke rate, glide periods, stroke acceleration patterns, body angle and work stroke(-1) were far more variable than during descent; however, mean speed remained fairly constant until buoyancy increased rapidly near the surface. For dives to depths >20 m, drag is by far the main component of mechanical work for these diving birds, and speed may be regulated to keep work against drag within a relatively narrow range.
机译:在潜水期间将记录仪连接到自由放宽的Brunnich的海雀科的乌里亚lomvia上,以测量游泳速度,体角,中风速率,中风和滑行时间以及中风内的加速度模式,并将数据用于模拟推动身体的机械成本机身(机头和后备箱不包括机翼)。在垂直潜水至102-135 m的过程中,海雀科的鸟儿在下降过程中调节速度,而大部分上升过程则调节到约1.6 +/- 0.2 m s(-1)。冲程速度随着深度而逐渐下降,两次冲程之间几乎没有滑动。从2 m到20 m深度的整个冲程在上冲程与下冲程上具有相似的向前推力,而在更深的深度和水平游泳过程中,下冲程具有更大的推力。尽管有明显的过渡,但是这些差异对我们估算的推动机身的机械成本影响不大(<6%),其中不包括机翼阻力。由于在高浮力下降的最初5 m内速度急剧增加,因此工作行程(-1)很高。此后,速度和相关阻力随着浮力逐渐下降而逐渐增加,因此在其余下降期间的机械工作行程(-1)保持相对恒定。在底部的非追逐游泳期间以及在动力上升至中性浮力深度(约71 m)期间,保持了相似的工作行程(-1)。即使将呼吸空气量调整为+/- 60%,针对浮力的模拟工作也仍然很重要,主要是在下降的前15 m,之后几乎所有工作都是针对阻力。实际上,阻力被低估了,因为我们的值不包括活跃游泳者周围水流变化所引起的阻力增强。在上升至71 m以上时,随着浮力的增加,冲程速率,滑行周期,冲程加速方式,体角和工作冲程(-1)的变化远大于下降过程。但是,平均速度保持相当恒定,直到浮力在水面附近迅速增加。对于潜水深度大于20 m的潜水来说,阻力是迄今为止这些潜水鸟机械工作的主要组成部分,并且可以调节速度以将抵抗阻力的工作保持在相对狭窄的范围内。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号