9780521861724htl 1..2

(Jacob Rumans) #1
Friedrichs, M., Graf, G. & Springer, B. (2000).
Skimming flow over a simulated
polychaete tube lawn at low population
densities.Marine Ecology Progress Series, 192 ,
219–228.
Gili, J. M. & Coma, R. (1998). Benthic suspension
feeders: their paramount role in littoral
marine food webs.Trends in Ecology and
Evolution, 13 , 316–321.
Gili, E. & LaBarbera, M. (1998). Hydrodynamic
behaviour of hippuritid rudist shells:
ecological consequences.Geobios, 22 ,
137–145.
Grant, J., Emerson, C.W. & Shumway, S.E.
(1993). Orientation, passive transport, and
sediment erosion features of the sea scallop
Placopecten magellanicusin the benthic
boundary layer.Canadian Journal of Zoology,
71 , 953–959.
Harbison, G.R. (1992). The gelatinous inhabitants
of the ocean interior.Oceanus, 35 ,18–23.
Hentschel, B.T. (1996). Ontogenetic changes in
particle-size selection by deposit-feeding
spionid polychaetes: the influence of palp
size on particle contact.Journal of Experimental
Marine Biology and Ecology, 206 ,1–24.
Jesling, J. (2002). Ultrastructural investigations
on the cephalic and metameric nuchal
organs ofSpiocf.filicornis(Polychaeta,
Spionidae).Zoomorphology, 121 , 213–220.
Johnson, A. S. (1990). Flow around phoronids:
consequences of a neighbor to suspension
feeders.Limnology and Oceanography, 35 ,
1395–1401.
Johnson, A. S. (1993). Sag-mediated modulated
tension in terebellid tentacles exposed to
flow.Biological Bulletin, 185 , 10–19.
Jørgensen, C.B. (1966).Biology of Suspension
Feeding. Oxford: Pergamon Press.
Kim, K. & Lasker, H.R. (1998). Allometry of
resource capture in colonial cnidarians and
constraints on modular growth.Functional
Ecology, 12 , 646–654.
Koehl, M.A. R. (1983). The morphology and
performance of suspension-feeding

appendages.Journal of Theoretical Biology,
105 , 1–11.
Koehl, M. A. R. (1993). Hairy little legs: feeding,
smelling, and swimming at low Reynolds
numbers.Contemporary Mathematics, 141 ,
33–64.
Koehl, M. A. R. (1995). Fluid flow through
hair-bearing appendages: feeding, smelling
and swimming at low and intermediate
Reynolds numbers. InBiological Fluid
Dynamics, ed. C.P. Ellington and T.J. Pedley.
Cambridge: The Company of Biologists
Limited, pp. 157–182.
Koehl, M. A. R. (1996). When does morphology
matter?Annual Review of Ecology and
Systematics, 27 , 501–542.
Koehl, M. A. R. (2000). Consequences of size
change during ontogeny and evolution. In
Scaling in Biology, ed. J.H. Brown and
G. B. West. Oxford: Oxford University Press,
pp. 67–86.
Koehl, M. A. R. (2001). Transitions in function at
low Reynolds number: hair-bearing animal
appendages.Mathematical Methods in the
Applied Sciences, 24 , 1523–1532.
LaBarbera, M. (1984). Feeding currents and
particle capture mechanisms in suspension
feeding animals.American Zoologist,
24 , 71–84.
Lindegarth, M., Jonsson, P. R. & Andre ́, C. (2002).
Physical and numerical modeling of the role
of hydrodynamic processes on adult-larval
interactions of a suspension-feeding
bivalve.Journal of Marine Research, 60 ,
499–516.
Loo, L.-O., Jonsson, P. R., Sko ̈ld, M. & Karlsson, O ̈.
(1996). Passive suspension feeding in
Amphiura filiformis(Echinodermata:
Ophiuroidea): feeding behaviour in flume
flow and potential feeding rate of field
populations.Marine Ecology Progress Series,
139 , 143–155.
Nachtigall, W. (2001). Some aspects of Reynolds
number effects in animals.Mathematical
Methods in the Applied Sciences, 24 , 1401–1408.

30 S. HUMPHRIES

Free download pdf