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The Kinematics and Dynamics of Schizopygopsis malacanthus Swimming during U(crit) Testing
SIMPLE SUMMARY: The swimming ability of fish plays a guiding role in the construction of fish passing facilities. However, it is not enough to know the swimming ability of fish. We need to know the behavior and energy consumption of fish in the process of movement, so as to determine the activity ar...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
MDPI
2022
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9597827/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36290229 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani12202844 |
Sumario: | SIMPLE SUMMARY: The swimming ability of fish plays a guiding role in the construction of fish passing facilities. However, it is not enough to know the swimming ability of fish. We need to know the behavior and energy consumption of fish in the process of movement, so as to determine the activity area and migration suitable for fish. Therefore, a video tracking program was used to record and analyze the motion of five test fish in a Brett-type flume during each velocity step. The results obtained the kinematic and dynamic parameters of fish. Secondly, we found that steady fish swimming is not entirely steady in flowing water, with swimming speed varying by 2.2% to 8.4% and increasing with flow velocity. Further, because energy expenditure increases with the cube of swimming speed, a slight excess in fish passage flow velocity could result in a disproportionately large decrease in the rate of passage success. Therefore, we recommend guarding against an excessive flow velocity in the main velocity zone and ensuring that resting pools along the passageway are adequate. Our characterization of the kinematics and dynamics of fish swimming provides important new information to consider when indices of swimming ability from controlled tank testing are applied to fish passage design. ABSTRACT: The swimming kinematics (how fish move) and dynamics (how forces effect movement) of Schizopygopsis malacanthus were investigated during the determination of [Formula: see text] by stepped velocity testing. A video tracking program was used to record and analyze the motion of five test fish in a Brett-type flume during each velocity step. The findings fell into three groups: (1) Even when flow was uniform, fish did not swim steadily, with speeds fluctuating by 2.2% to 8.4% during steady swimming. The proportion of unsteady swimming time increased with water velocity, and defining steady and unsteady swimming statistically, in terms of the definition of standard deviation of instantaneous displacements, may have higher accuracy. (2) In steady swimming, the forward velocity and acceleration of fish were correlated with body length (p < 0.05), but in unsteady swimming the correlations were not significant. The maximum swimming speed (1.504 m/s) and acceleration (16.54 m/s(2)) occurred during unsteady swimming, but these measurements may not be definitive because of tank space constraints on fish movement and the passive behavior of the test fish with respect to acceleration. (3) Burst-coast swimming in still water, investigated by previous scholars as an energy conserving behavior, is not the same as the gait transition from steady to unsteady swimming in flowing water. In this study, the axial force of fish swimming in the unsteady mode was significantly higher (×1.2~1.6) than in the steady mode, as was the energy consumed (×1.27~3.33). Thus, gait transition increases, rather than decreases, energy consumption. Our characterization of the kinematics and dynamics of fish swimming provides important new information to consider when indices of swimming ability from controlled tank testing are applied to fish passage design. |
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