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Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences
Number 50 (October 2008), Southern Fishes Council
Number 50 (October 2008), Southern Fishes Council
Southeastern Fishes Council Proceedings
(October 2008) - Use of Visible Implant Fluorescent Elastomer (VIE) Tag Technique on Darters (Teleostei: Percidae): Mortality and Tag Retention. By Joyce A. Coombs and J. Larry Wilson
Diversity and Distribution of Native Freshwater Mussels in Bayou Bartholomew, Arkansas. By Jeff A. Brooks, Russell L. Minton, Steven G. George, David M. Hayes, Ronnie Ulmer, and Frank Pezold
A Note on Three Collections of Cyprinodontid Fishes Housed in the British Museum of Natural History, Including Syntypes and Historically Important Specimens. By Royal D. Suttkus and James D. Williams
Minutes, Business Meeting, 33rd Annual Meeting, Southeastern Fishes Council
Regional Southeastern Fishes Council …
Evidence Of Self-Correcting Spiral Flows In Swimming Boxfishes, I. K. Bartol, M. S. Gordon, P. Webb, D. Weihs, M. Gharib
Evidence Of Self-Correcting Spiral Flows In Swimming Boxfishes, I. K. Bartol, M. S. Gordon, P. Webb, D. Weihs, M. Gharib
Biological Sciences Faculty Publications
The marine boxfishes have rigid keeled exteriors (carapaces) unlike most fishes, yet exhibit high stability, high maneuverability and relatively low drag given their large cross-sectional area. These characteristics lend themselves well to bioinspired design. Based on previous stereolithographic boxfish model experiments, it was determined that vortical flows develop around the carapace keels, producing self-correcting forces that facilitate swimming in smooth trajectories. To determine if similar self-correcting flows occur in live, actively swimming boxfishes, two species of boxfishes (Ostracion meleagris and Lactophrys triqueter) were induced to swim against currents in a water tunnel, while flows around the fishes were quantified …