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Physical modeling of the batocrinid anal tube: functional analysis and multiple hypothesis testing
Authors:TOMASZ K. BAUMILLER
Affiliation:Department of the Geophysical Sciences, University of Chicago, 5734 S. Ellis Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60637, USA;Present address: Department of Geology and Mineralogy, The Ohio State University, 125 South Oval Mall, Columbus, OH 43210-1398, USA;2 h March, 1990
Abstract:Baumiller, T. K. 1990 10 15: Physical modeling of the batocrinid anal tube: functional analysis and multiple hypothesis testing. Lethaia , VOL 23, pp. 399–408. Oslo. ISSN 0024–1164.
Three hypotheses related to the function of the batocrinid anal tube were tested using physical models: (1) the anal tube served as a 'rudder', allowing the crinoid to passively maintain an effective feeding posture in moving water, (2) the tube served as a splitter 'plate', reducing the drag on the organism while it was in its feeding posture, and (3) the anal tube functioned as a 'chimney' by moving the anus downstream of the arms and thus reducing the risk of the organism ingesting its own wastes and/or gametes. Results of experiments performed in a recirculating flow tank suggested that the tube was well suited for the 'chimney' function: it reduced the concentrations of excreted matter in the proximity of the feeding appendages. Differences in rotational torques between models with a tube versus those without a tube implied that a large tube may have increased the rotational stability of the feeding posture in environments with variable current directions. No differences were detected between drag measurements on models with and without the anal tube; thus the 'splitter-plate' function of the tube was rejected. ▭ Batocrinid anal tube, functional morphology, physical modeling .
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