Scaling of swim speed and stroke frequency in geometrically similar penguins: they swim optimally to minimize cost of transport.

Proc Biol Sci

International Coastal Research Center, Ocean Research Institute, The University of Tokyo, 2-106-1 Akahama, Otsuchi, Iwate 028-1102, Japan.

Published: March 2010

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated swimming speeds and stroke frequencies of seven species of free-ranging penguins, finding that their morphologies support the idea of geometrical similarity but that their actual swimming performance contradicts previous predictions.
  • Cruising speeds were found to be related to mass, contrary to the expected scaling, with observed stroke frequencies also differing from the initial theoretical model.
  • The researchers propose a new theoretical model that incorporates metabolic cost and mechanical forces, predicting optimal swimming speed and stroke frequency relationships that match the penguin data, suggesting efficient energy use during diving.

Article Abstract

It has been predicted that geometrically similar animals would swim at the same speed with stroke frequency scaling with mass(-1/3). In the present study, morphological and behavioural data obtained from free-ranging penguins (seven species) were compared. Morphological measurements support the geometrical similarity. However, cruising speeds of 1.8-2.3 m s(-1) were significantly related to mass(0.08) and stroke frequencies were proportional to mass(-0.29). These scaling relationships do not agree with the previous predictions for geometrically similar animals. We propose a theoretical model, considering metabolic cost, work against mechanical forces (drag and buoyancy), pitch angle and dive depth. This new model predicts that: (i) the optimal swim speed, which minimizes the energy cost of transport, is proportional to (basal metabolic rate/drag)(1/3) independent of buoyancy, pitch angle and dive depth; (ii) the optimal speed is related to mass(0.05); and (iii) stroke frequency is proportional to mass(-0.28). The observed scaling relationships of penguins support these predictions, which suggest that breath-hold divers swam optimally to minimize the cost of transport, including mechanical and metabolic energy during dive.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2842743PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2009.1515DOI Listing

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