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Journal ArticleDOI

Fluid Mechanics of Planktonic Microorganisms

TLDR
In this paper, the authors discuss the fluid physics governing the locomotion and feeding of individual planktonic microorganisms (≤ 1 mm) and provide a review of the recent advances in this area.
Abstract
The diversity of the morphologies, propulsion mechanisms, flow environments, and behaviors of planktonic microorganisms has long provided inspiration for fluid physicists, with further intrigue provided by the counterintuitive hydrodynamics of their viscous world. Motivation for studying the fluid dynamics of microplankton abounds, as microorganisms support the food web and control the biogeochemistry of most aquatic environments, particularly the oceans. In this review, we discuss the fluid physics governing the locomotion and feeding of individual planktonic microorganisms (≤1 mm). In the past few years, the field has witnessed an increasing number of exciting discoveries, from the visualization of the flow field around individual swimmers to linkages between microhydrodynamic processes and ecosystem dynamics. In other areas, chiefly the ability of microorganisms to take up nutrients and sense hydromechanical signals, our understanding will benefit from reinvigorated interest, and ample opportunities for breakthroughs exist. When it comes to the fluid mechanics of living organisms, there is plenty of room at the bottom.

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Meso-scale turbulence in living fluids

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors combine experiments, particle simulations, and continuum theory to identify the statistical properties of self-sustained meso-scale turbulence in active systems, and propose a minimal continuum model for incompressible bacterial flow.
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Interaction and signalling between a cosmopolitan phytoplankton and associated bacteria

TL;DR: This study expands on the emerging recognition that marine microbial communities are part of tightly connected networks by providing evidence that these interactions are mediated through production and exchange of infochemicals.
Journal ArticleDOI

Topological defects in epithelia govern cell death and extrusion.

TL;DR: A mechanism for apoptotic cell extrusion is proposed: spontaneously formed topological defects in epithelia govern cell fate, and the ability to control extrusion hotspots by geometrically inducing defects through microcontact printing of patterned monolayers is demonstrated.
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Rethinking the marine carbon cycle: Factoring in the multifarious lifestyles of microbes

TL;DR: The challenges of understanding the role protists play in geochemical cycling in the oceans are reviewed, and researchers must bring the conceptual framework of systems biology into bigger “ecosystems biology” models that broadly capture the geochemical activities of interacting plankton networks.
Journal ArticleDOI

Marine Microbes See a Sea of Gradients

TL;DR: It is proposed that turbulence favors motile bacteria that adopt an optimal foraging strategy, which trades off the relative high cost of motility to gain the benefits of plumes of nutrients by zipping between them at optimized speeds.
References
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Journal Article

Bubbles, Drops, and Particles

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated the applicability of the standard κ-ϵ equations and other turbulence models with respect to their applicability in swirling, recirculating flows.
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The Ecological Role of Water-Column Microbes in the Sea*

TL;DR: Evidence is presented to suggest that numbers of free bacteria are controlled by nanoplankton~c heterotrophic flagellates which are ubiquitous in the marine water column, thus providing the means for returning some energy from the 'microbial loop' to the conventional planktonic food chain.
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Primary Production of the Biosphere: Integrating Terrestrial and Oceanic Components

TL;DR: Integrating conceptually similar models of the growth of marine and terrestrial primary producers yielded an estimated global net primary production of 104.9 petagrams of carbon per year, with roughly equal contributions from land and oceans.
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Life at low Reynolds number

TL;DR: Weisskopf as mentioned in this paper presented a transparencies of a tall rectangular transparent vessel of corn syrup, projected by an overhead projector turned on its side, which was itself a slightly edited transcript of a tape.
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The motion of ellipsoidal particles immersed in a viscous fluid

TL;DR: In this article, the authors considered the case of particles of ellipsoidal shape, and showed that the condition for the validity of this approximation is that the product of the velocity of the ellipssoid by its linear dimensions shall be small compared with the "kinematic coefficient, of viscosity" of the fluid.
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