4.7 Article

High activity and Levy searches: jellyfish can search the water column like fish

Journal

PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volume 279, Issue 1728, Pages 465-473

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2011.0978

Keywords

plankton thin layers; Lasker's stable ocean hypothesis; zooplankton; superdiffusion; biologging

Funding

  1. Interreg 4a Ireland-Wales programme
  2. UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)
  3. Leverhulme Trust
  4. Esmee Fairbairn Foundation
  5. Climate Change Consortium for Wales (C3W)
  6. Marine Biological Association of the UK
  7. MBA Senior Research Fellowship
  8. NERC [mba010004, NE/I00050X/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  9. Natural Environment Research Council [NE/I00050X/1, mba010004] Funding Source: researchfish

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Over-fishing may lead to a decrease in fish abundance and a proliferation of jellyfish. Active movements and prey search might be thought to provide a competitive advantage for fish, but here we use data-loggers to show that the frequently occurring coastal jellyfish (Rhizostoma octopus) does not simply passively drift to encounter prey. Jellyfish (327 days of data from 25 jellyfish with depth collected every 1 min) showed very dynamic vertical movements, with their integrated vertical movement averaging 619.2 m d(-1), more than 60 times the water depth where they were tagged. The majority of movement patterns were best approximated by exponential models describing normal random walks. However, jellyfish also showed switching behaviour from exponential patterns to patterns best fitted by a truncated Levy distribution with exponents (mean mu = 1.96, range 1.2-2.9) close to the theoretical optimum for searching for sparse prey (mu(opt) approximate to 2.0). Complex movements in these 'simple' animals may help jellyfish to compete effectively with fish for plankton prey, which may enhance their ability to increase in dominance in perturbed ocean systems.

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