The Strongest Animal in the World

Posted by John Farrier in Animals & Pets, Science & Tech on May 14, 2010 at 1:52 pm

The copepod is just a single millimeter long. But for it’s size, it’s the strongest, fastest animal alive. The ability to escape or resist predators is a major evolutionary advantage:

Together with researchers from DTU Aqua and DTU Physics and with the aid of high-speed video recordings, Thomas Kiørboe has been able to give a detailed picture of the copepods’ escape jump. The powerful jump has made an incredible impression upon the researchers.

“They jump at a rate of half a metre per second, and that’s within a few thousandths of a second,” says Thomas Kiørboe, continuing: “It shows that copepods – in relation to their size – are more than 10 times as strong as has been previously documented for any other animal or even man-made motors…”

Link via io9 | Photo: NOAA

Previously: Marine Biologists Filmed Copepod Going to the Bathroom

 
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The Lucky Luke Effect: How Zooplanktons Eat in a Vast Ocean

Posted by Alex in Animals & Pets, Science & Tech on September 6, 2009 at 1:08 pm

Stop and think about this for a second: how does a zooplankton eat in such a vast ocean? Turns out, it’s not a trivial task: copepods, a type of zooplankton, filter a volume of water approximately 1 million times their own body volume to survive every day … and at their scale, water has the consistency of syrup.

Scientists discovered a particularly interesting "ambush feeding" technique dubbed the Lucky Luke effect:

“So far, we know of four ways in which zooplankters tackle the engineering feat of finding food in water which appears as thick as syrup. Our contribution has been to describe the mechanism at work for the last of these: How some copepods perform spectacularly precise and rapid surprise attacks on their single-cell prey after first having registered the prey by means of hydrodynamic signals,” explains Professor Thomas Kiørboe, DTU Aqua.

The solution for the ambush-feeding copepods builds on what Thomas Kiørboe calls the Lucky Luke effect:

“Our recordings show that the sub-mm copepods accelerate to a speed of 100 mm per second in a few milliseconds, while at the same time rotating perhaps 180 degrees. Like Lucky Luke who is faster than his shadow, the copepods jump forward so rapidly and with such precision that they, so to speak, shake the viscous boundary layer off, in that way getting close enough to their prey to capture it with their feeding limbs.”

The viscous boundary layer is the layer of water which the copepods pull with them when moving their bodies through the syrupy water. The larger the animals are and the faster they swim, the thinner it seems.

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