4.5 Article

Volumetric imaging of fish locomotion

Journal

BIOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 7, Issue 5, Pages 695-698

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2011.0282

Keywords

fish; swimming; locomotion; volumetric imaging; vortex

Funding

  1. NSF [EFRI-0938043]

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Fishes use multiple flexible fins in order to move and maintain stability in a complex fluid environment. We used a new approach, a volumetric velocimetry imaging system, to provide the first instantaneous three-dimensional views of wake structures as they are produced by freely swimming fishes. This new technology allowed us to demonstrate conclusively the linked ring vortex wake pattern that is produced by the symmetrical (homocercal) tail of fishes, and to visualize for the first time the three-dimensional vortex wake interaction between the dorsal and anal fins and the tail. We found that the dorsal and anal fin wakes were rapidly (within one tail beat) assimilated into the caudal fin vortex wake. These results show that volumetric imaging of biologically generated flow patterns can reveal new features of locomotor dynamics, and provides an avenue for future investigations of the diversity of fish swimming patterns and their hydrodynamic consequences.

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