论文标题
软沉积物中水生蠕虫的挖掘动力
Burrowing dynamics of aquatic worms in soft sediments
论文作者
论文摘要
我们研究了\ textbf {\ textit {lumbriculus variegatus}}在水饱和沉积床中的动力学,以了解在湖泊和海洋底部发现的底栖动物的有限损失。观察到这些细长的水生蠕虫可以在水饱和沉积物和水中执行伸长收缩和横向不足的中风。观察到在沉积物介质中更大的拖动各向异性,与使用拖曳辅助推进的相同中风的水游泳相比,蠕虫的挖洞速度提高了蠕虫的速度。我们通过基于粘性流体中的电阻性运动理论和沉积物中蠕动运动的动态锚模型组合计算出的形式来捕获观察到的速度。发现蠕动可有效地在非粘性沉积物中挖洞,这些沉积物迅速填充在沉积物床内移动的体内。鉴于,在水中发现不可能的中风有效,在无法实现蠕动运动的浅层沉积物层中。我们表明,这种双重冲程也出现在earth \ textbf {\ textit {eisenia fetida}}}}}}}}的潮湿沉积物中。我们在介质的流变方面的分析表明,双重冲程是由生物体利用的,以协商可能被异构堆积的沉积物床进行协商,并且可以被主动入侵者使用,以便从宽松的床表面层有效地从液体中移动,这些床层通过宽松的床表面层,这些床层很容易地流动到下面的良好固定床。
We investigate the dynamics of \textbf{\textit{Lumbriculus variegatus}} in water-saturated sediment beds to understand limbless locomotion in the benthic zone found at the bottom of lakes and oceans. These slender aquatic worms are observed to perform elongation-contraction and transverse undulatory strokes in both water-saturated sediments and water. Greater drag anisotropy in the sediment medium is observed to boost the burrowing speed of the worm compared to swimming in water with the same stroke using drag-assisted propulsion. We capture the observed speeds by combining the calculated forms based on resistive-force theory of undulatory motion in viscous fluids and a dynamic anchor model of peristaltic motion in the sediments. Peristalsis is found to be effective for burrowing in non-cohesive sediments which fill in rapidly behind the moving body inside the sediment bed. Whereas, the undulatory stroke is found to be effective in water and in shallow sediment layers where anchoring is not possible to achieve peristaltic motion. We show that such dual strokes occur as well in the earthworm \textbf{\textit{Eisenia fetida}} which inhabit moist sediments that are prone to flooding. Our analysis in terms of the rheology of the medium shows that the dual strokes are exploited by organisms to negotiate sediment beds that may be packed heterogeneously, and can be used by active intruders to move effectively from a fluid through the loose bed surface layer which fluidize easily to the well-consolidated bed below.