| Literature DB >> 26378212 |
Erik A Martens1, Navish Wadhwa2, Nis S Jacobsen3, Christian Lindemann4, Ken H Andersen3, André Visser3.
Abstract
Survival in aquatic environments requires organisms to have effective means of collecting information from their surroundings through various sensing strategies. In this study, we explore how sensing mode and range depend on body size. We find a hierarchy of sensing modes determined by body size. With increasing body size, a larger battery of modes becomes available (chemosensing, mechanosensing, vision, hearing and echolocation, in that order) while the sensing range also increases. This size-dependent hierarchy and the transitions between primary sensory modes are explained on the grounds of limiting factors set by physiology and the physical laws governing signal generation, transmission and reception. We theoretically predict the body size limits for various sensory modes, which align well with size ranges found in literature. The treatise of all ocean life, from unicellular organisms to whales, demonstrates how body size determines available sensing modes, and thereby acts as a major structuring factor of aquatic life.Entities:
Keywords: body size; fluid physics; ocean life; sensing modes; sensing range; traits
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26378212 PMCID: PMC4614749 DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2015.1346
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Biol Sci ISSN: 0962-8452 Impact factor: 5.349