PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Whale sharks do the math to avoid that sinking feeling

How the world's largest fish uses geometry and energy conservation to stay afloat

2010-11-25
(Press-News.org) They are the largest fish species in the ocean, but the majestic gliding motion of the whale shark is, scientists argue, an astonishing feat of mathematics and energy conservation. In new research published today in the British Ecological Society's journal Functional Ecology marine scientists reveal how these massive sharks use geometry to enhance their natural negative buoyancy and stay afloat.

For most animals movement is crucial for survival, both for finding food and for evading predators. However, movement costs substantial amounts of energy and while this is true of land based animals it is even more complex for birds and marine animals which travel in three dimensions. Unsurprisingly this has a profound impact on their movement patterns.

"The key factor for animal movement is travel speed, which governs how much energy an animal uses, the distance it will travel and how often resources are encountered," said lead author Adrian Gleiss from Swansea University. "However, oceanic animals not only have to consider their travel speed, but also how vertical movement will affect their energy expenditure, which changes the whole perspective."

For the past four years, Adrian Gleiss and Rory Wilson, from Swansea University, worked with Brad Norman from ECOcean Inc. to lead an international team to investigate the movements of whale sharks, Rhincodon typus, at Ningaloo Reef in Western Australia. They attached animal-borne motion sensors, accelerometers, to the free-swimming whale sharks to measure their swimming activity and vertical movement, which allowed them to quantify the energetic cost of vertical movement.

The team's data revealed that whale sharks are able to glide without investing energy into movement when descending, but they had to beat their tails when they ascended. This occurs because sharks, unlike many fish, have negative buoyancy.

Also, the steeper the sharks ascended, the harder they had to beat their tail and the more energy they had to invest. The Whale Sharks displayed two broad movement modes, one consisting of shallow ascent angles, which minimize the energetic cost of moving in the horizontal while a second characteristic of steeper ascent angles, optimized the energetic cost of vertical movement.

"These results demonstrate how geometry plays a crucial role in movement strategies for animals moving in 3-dimensions," concluded Gleiss. "This use of negative buoyancy may play a large part in oceanic sharks being able to locate and travel between scarce and unpredictable food sources efficiently."

INFORMATION:

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Fatal blood clot genetic risk breakthrough announcement

Fatal blood clot genetic risk breakthrough announcement
2010-11-25
An international team led by researchers from the Universities of Leicester and Cambridge has announced a breakthrough in identifying people at risk of developing potentially fatal blood clots that can lead to heart attack. The discovery, published this week (25 November) in the leading haematology journal Blood, is expected to advance ways of detecting and treating coronary heart disease – the most common form of disease affecting the heart and an important cause of premature death. The research led by Professor Alison Goodall from the University of Leicester and Professor ...

Growth-factor gel shows promise as hearing-loss treatment

2010-11-25
A new treatment has been developed for sudden sensorineural hearing loss (SSHL), a condition that causes deafness in 40,000 Americans each year, usually in early middle-age. Researchers writing in the open access journal BMC Medicine describe the positive results of a preliminary trial of insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF1), applied as a topical gel. Takayuki Nakagawa, from Kyoto University, Japan, worked with a team of researchers to test the gel in 25 patients whose SSHL had not responded to the normal treatment of systemic gluticosteroids. He said, "The results indicated ...

Each 5-degree temperature rise boosts kids' hospital admissions for serious injury by 10 percent

2010-11-25
Every 5°C rise in maximum temperature pushes up the rate of hospital admissions for serious injuries among children, reveals one of the largest studies of its kind published online in Emergency Medicine Journal. Conversely, each 5° C drop in the minimum daily temperature boosts adult admissions for serious injury by more than 3%, while snow prompts an 8% rise, the research shows. The authors base their findings on the patterns of hospital treatment for both adults and children in 21 emergency care units across England, belonging to the Trauma Audit and research Network ...

Workplace asthma costs UK at least $158 million a year

2010-11-25
Workplace asthma costs the UK at least £100 million a year, and may be as high as £135 million, reveals research published online in Thorax. An estimated 3,000 new cases of occupational asthma are diagnosed every year in the UK, but the condition is under diagnosed, say the authors. They reviewed published data on the costs of all asthma and workplace asthma, as well as the impact costs. The evidence was then used to calculate the costs of workplace asthma on an individual's ability to work and their wider life, including their use of health services, based on a ...

Epilepsy drugs may not affect IQ of breastfed babies, study says

2010-11-25
New research from the Emory University School of Medicine offers reassurance for nursing mothers with epilepsy. According to a study published in the November 24 online issue of Neurology, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology, breastfeeding a baby while taking a seizure medication may have no harmful effect on the child's IQ later in life. "Our results showed no difference in IQ scores between the children who were breastfed and those who were not," says study author Kimford Meador, MD, professor of neurology, Emory University School of Medicine and ...

Jet-lagged and forgetful? It's no coincidence

2010-11-25
Chronic jet lag alters the brain in ways that cause memory and learning problems long after one's return to a regular 24-hour schedule, according to research by University of California, Berkeley, psychologists. Twice a week for four weeks, the researchers subjected female Syrian hamsters to six-hour time shifts – the equivalent of a New York-to-Paris airplane flight. During the last two weeks of jet lag and a month after recovery from it, the hamsters' performance on learning and memory tasks was measured. As expected, during the jet lag period, the hamsters had trouble ...

Being a 'good sport' can be critical to maintaining lifelong physical activity

2010-11-25
Toronto, ON – November 24 – It's never fun riding the bench – but could it also make you less likely to be physically active in the future? That's one of the questions being explored by Mark Eys, an associate professor of kinesiology and physical education at Wilfrid Laurier University and the Canada Research Chair in Group Dynamics and Physical Activity. Eys is presenting his work as part of this week's Canada Research Chairs conference in Toronto. Eys, who also teaches out of the university's psychology department, is studying group cohesion – which, in sporting ...

Diabetes drug could work against Alzheimer's

2010-11-25
Bonn, 24th November 2010. Metformin, a drug used in type 2-diabetes might have the potential to also act against Alzheimer's disease. This has been shown in a study from scientists of the German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE), the University of Dundee and the Max-Planck-Institute for Molecular Genetics. The researchers have found out that the diabetes drug metformin counteracts alterations of the cell structure protein Tau in mice nerve cells. These alterations are a main cause of the Alzheimer's disease. Moreover, they uncovered the molecular mechanism of ...

Female fish -- and humans? -- lose interest when their male loses a slugfest

Female fish -- and humans? -- lose interest when their male loses a slugfest
2010-11-25
You may think of your love for your mate as the noble emotion of a pure heart, but some primitive parts of your brain are taking a decidedly more pragmatic approach to the subject, according to Stanford biologists. In experiments with African cichlid fish, the scientists discovered that when a female shows a preference for a particular male, but then witnesses him losing a fight with another male, her feelings toward him change. Areas of the female's brain associated with anxiety showed increased activity after witnessing an altercation. "It is the same as if a woman ...

New study reveals how cannabis suppresses immune functions

2010-11-25
An international team of immunologists studying the effects of cannabis have discovered how smoking marijuana can trigger a suppression of the body's immune functions. The research, published in the European Journal of Immunology, reveals why cannabis users are more susceptible to certain types of cancers and infections. The team, led by Dr Prakash Nagarkatti from the University of South Carolina, focused their research on cannabinoids, a group of compounds found inside the cannabis plant, including THC (delta-9 tetahydrocannabinol) which is already used for medical ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

In US, saving money is top reason to embrace solar power

Antibiotic pollution in rivers

Join the nation of lifesavers at NFL draft in Green Bay

TTUHSC researchers seek novel therapies for chronic pain

Predicting long-term psychedelic side-effects

Carnegie Mellon researchers create transformable flat-to-shape objects using sewing technology

Preventing cellular senescence to prevent neuroinflammation

Tuning in to blood glucose for simpler early diabetes detection

NUS Medicine and HeyVenus study: Menopause is a critical workplace challenge for APAC business leaders

Insects are disappearing due to agriculture – and many other drivers, new research reveals

Blends of child and best friend, with power imbalance: How dogs fit into our social networks

Transgene-free genome editing in poplar trees: A step toward sustainable forestry

Single-dose psychedelic boosts brain flexibility for weeks, peer-reviewed study finds

Sex differences drive substance use patterns in panic disorder patients

Multi-omics meets immune profiling in the quest to decode disease risk

Medication-induced sterol disruption: A silent threat to brain development and public health

Shining a light on DNA: a rapid, ultra-sensitive, PCR-free detection method

European hares are thriving in the city: New monitoring methods reveal high densities in Danish urban areas

Study: middle-aged Americans are lonelier than adults in other countries, age groups

World’s leading science competition identifies 19 breakthrough solutions around the globe with greatest potential to tackle the planetary crisis

Should farm fields be used for crops or solar? MSU research suggests both

Study: Using pilocarpine drops post goniotomy may reduce long-term glaucoma medication needs

Stanford Medicine researchers develop RNA blood test to detect cancers, other clues

Novel treatment approach for language disorder shows promise

Trash talk: As plastic use soars, researchers examine biodegradable solutions

Using ChatGPT, students might pass a course, but with a cost

Psilocibin, or “magic mushroom,” use increased among all age groups since decriminalization in 2019

More Americans are using psilocybin—especially those with mental health conditions, study shows

Meta-analysis finds Transcendental Meditation reduces post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms across populations and cultures

AACR: Five MD Anderson researchers honored with 2025 Scientific Achievement Awards

[Press-News.org] Whale sharks do the math to avoid that sinking feeling
How the world's largest fish uses geometry and energy conservation to stay afloat