The motility of microorganisms is often biased by gradients in physical and chemical properties of their environment, with myriad implications on their ecology. Here we show that fluid acceleration reorients gyrotactic plankton, triggering small-scale clustering. We experimentally demonstrate this phenomenon by studying the distribution of the phytoplankton Chlamydomonas augustae within a rotating tank and find it to be in good agreement with a new, generalized model of gyrotaxis. When this model is implemented in a direct numerical simulation of turbulent flow, we find that fluid acceleration generates multifractal plankton clustering, with faster and more stable cells producing stronger clustering. By producing accumulations in high-vorticity regions, this process is fundamentally different from clustering by gravitational acceleration, expanding the range of mechanisms by which turbulent flows can impact the spatial distribution of active suspensions.
Turbulent fluid acceleration generates clusters of gyrotactic microorganisms.
F. De Lillo,M. Cencini,W. M. Durham,M. Barry,R. Stocker,E. Climent,G. Boffetta
Published 2013 in Physical Review Letters
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- Publication year
2013
- Venue
Physical Review Letters
- Publication date
2013-10-04
- Fields of study
Medicine, Physics, Environmental Science
- Identifiers
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- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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