Sea Turtles Employ Drag-Reducing Techniques to Conserve Energy

Author:

van der Geest NickORCID,Garcia LorenzoORCID,Nates Roy,Gonzalez-Vazquez Alberto

Abstract

Sea turtles are recognised as one of the ocean’s most remarkable migratory species, accomplishing journeys that cover thousands of kilometres. This fact is even more extraordinary when considering sea turtles consume mostly low-energy foods. The biology of sea turtles dominates the literature; however, the swimming strategies they employ to achieve their migratory success from a biomechanical and hydrodynamic viewpoint is relatively unexplored. In past research, the sea turtle’s upstroke has been debated among researchers as to whether it is passive or for thrust production. In this work, we recreate a model based on the green sea turtle (Chelonia mydas) and develop an ad hoc testing rig to uncover the secrets behind the sea turtle’s upstroke. Our findings suggest sea turtles utilise a passive upstroke that can substantially lower the animal’s drag coefficient to levels that cause insignificant losses in swim speed despite not developing any thrust force. This can conceivably save the animal a notable amount of energy as the upstroke is responsible for a large percentage of the overall limb beat cycle. These findings could potentially pave a path towards developing high-efficiency bioinspired underwater drone technologies.

Funder

BioDesign Lab research

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Ocean Engineering,Water Science and Technology,Civil and Structural Engineering

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