Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Behavioral Control of Swash-Riding in the Clam Donax variabilis

1995; Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL); Volume: 189; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.2307/1542462

ISSN

1939-8697

Autores

Olaf Ellers,

Tópico(s)

Micro and Nano Robotics

Resumo

Clams of the species Donax variabilis migrate shoreward during rising tides and seaward during falling tides. These clams spend most of the time in the sand, emerging several times per tidal cycle to ride waves. Migration is not merely a passive result of waves eroding clams out of the sand; rather clams actively jump out of the sand and ride specific waves. Such active migration is experimentally demonstrated during a falling tide by comparing the motion of dead and live clams; live clams emerge from the sand and move seaward even when dead ones do not. As low tide approaches, live clams become progressively less active. They cease migrating for 2 hours around low tide and resume jumping to migrate shoreward after the tide has turned. During the rising tide, far from being passive, the clams jump out to ride only the largest 20% of waves. Specifically, they choose swash that have the largest excursion, i.e., those swash that move furthest on the beach.

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