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    Microfluidics for Hydrodynamics Investigations of Sand Dollar Larvae

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    The life cycle of most marine invertebrates includes a planktonic larval stage before metamorphosis to bottom-dwelling adulthood. During larval stage, ciliary-mediated activity enables feeding (capture unicellular algae) and transport of materials (oxygen) required for the larva's growth, development, and successful metamorphosis. Investigating the underlying hydrodynamics of these behaviors is valuable for addressing fundamental biological questions (e.g., phenotypic plasticity) and advancing engineering applications. In this work, we combined microfluidics and fluorescence microscopy as a miniaturized PIV (mPIV) to study ciliary-medicated hydrodynamics during suspension feeding in sand dollar larvae (Dendraster excentricus). First, we confirmed the approach's feasibility by examining the underlying hydrodynamics (vortex patterns) for low- and high-fed larvae. Next, ciliary hydrodynamics were tracked from 11 days post-fertilization (DPF) to 20 DPF for 21 low-fed larvae. Microfluidics enabled the examination of baseline activities (without external flow) and behaviors in the presence of environmental cues (external flow). A library of qualitative vortex patterns and quantitative hydrodynamics was generated and shared as a stand alone repository. Results from mPIV (velocities) were used to examine the role of ciliary activity in transporting materials (oxygen). Given the laminar flow and the viscosity-dominated environments surrounding the larvae, overcoming the diffusive boundary layer is critical for the organism's survival. Peclet number analysis for oxygen transport suggested that ciliary velocities help overcome the diffusion dominated transport (max Pe numbers between 30-60). Microfluidics serving as mPIV provided a scalable and accessible approach for investigating the ciliary hydrodynamics of marine organisms.Comment: 21 pages and 11 figures (videos not included
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