No evidence for interaction in the active feeding behavior in pairs of the intertidal barnacle Balanus glandula.
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Authors
Geoga, Christopher
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Friday Harbor Laboratories
Abstract
Barnacles are gregarious, suspension-feeding invertebrates. They are found
mostly in the intertidal and sub-tidal zones, and densely aggregated to facilitate sexual
reproduction by copulation. By living together in dense groups, barnacles can change
their local flow environment, potentially altering the behavior or energetics of their
neighbors. In this study, I recorded video of small aggregations of the barnacle Balanus
glandula and studied whether or not individuals responded to adjacent barnacles in their
active feeding behavior by either maintaining synchrony or asynchrony in cirral beating. I
found that barnacles do not exhibit any behavior that suggests sensitivity to neighbors’
cirral positions, and that the difference in beating phase between actively feeding
individuals follows a periodic function as would be expected when comparing the phase
of the two individuals beating independently.
