• New laser system provides 3D reconstruct

    From ScienceDaily@1337:3/111 to All on Wed Jun 3 22:28:04 2020
    New laser system provides 3D reconstructions of living deep-sea animals
    and mucus filters

    Date:
    June 3, 2020
    Source:
    Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute
    Summary:
    Living in an essentially zero-gravity environment, many deep-sea
    animals have evolved soft, gelatinous bodies and collect food
    using elaborate mucus filters. Until now, studying these delicate
    structures has been virtually impossible. A new study describes a
    unique laser-based system for constructing 3D models of diaphanous
    marine animals and the mucus structures they secrete.



    FULL STORY ========================================================================== Living in an essentially zero-gravity environment, many deep-sea animals
    have evolved soft, gelatinous bodies and collect food using elaborate
    mucus filters.

    Until now, studying these delicate structures has been virtually
    impossible. A new study published in the journal Nature describes
    a unique laser-based system for constructing 3D models of diaphanous
    marine animals and the mucus structures they secrete.


    ========================================================================== According to Kakani Katija, MBARI Principal Engineer and the lead author
    on the new paper, "Mucus is ubiquitous in the ocean, and complex mucus structures are made by animals for feeding, health, and protection. Now
    that we have a way to visualize these structures deep below the surface
    we can finally understand how they function and what roles they play in
    the ocean." For this study, the researchers focused on one of the most prolific mucus architects, deep-sea animals called larvaceans. Larvaceans
    are abundant throughout the world's ocean basins and range from less
    than one centimeter to about 10 centimeters in length. So-called "giant" larvaceans create balloon- like mucus webs that can be up to a meter
    across. Inside these outer filters are smaller, fist-sized inner filters
    that the animals use to feed on tiny particles and organisms, ranging
    from less than a micron to a few millimeters in size.

    Despite their insubstantial bodies, larvaceans remove vast amounts of
    carbon- rich food out of the surrounding water. When their mucus filters
    become clogged the animals release the mucus, which sinks rapidly to the seafloor. This helps the ocean remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere
    and carries microplastics from the water column down to the seafloor.

    Researchers, like MBARI Senior Scientist and co-author Bruce Robison,
    have long been interested in how larvaceans can filter a wide variety of particles while processing very large volumes of water (up to 80 liters
    an hour). Previous studies have looked at smaller larvacean filters in
    the laboratory, but this is the first study to provide quantitative data
    about these mucus structures in the open ocean.

    To gather these data, Katija, who heads MBARI's Bioinspiration Lab, worked
    with a team of engineers, scientists, and submersible pilots to develop an instrument called DeepPIV (PIV stands for particle imaging velocimetry).

    Mounted on a remotely operated vehicle (ROV), the DeepPIV instrument
    projects a sheet of laser light that illuminates particles in the water,
    like dust motes in a sunbeam. By recording the movement of these particles
    in video, researchers can quantify tiny currents around marine animals as
    well as water flowing through their filters and their transparent bodies.



    ========================================================================== During field deployments of the DeepPIV system, Katija and her colleagues discovered that, as the ROV moved back and forth, the sheet of laser
    light revealed a series of cross sections through the transparent,
    gelatinous bodies and the mucus filters of giant larvaceans. By assembling
    a series of these cross-sectional images, the team was able to create three-dimensional reconstructions of individual larvaceans and their
    filters, much as radiologists do following a CAT scan of a human body.

    Collecting high-fidelity video imagery required skilled piloting of
    MBARI's ROVs. "Using DeepPIV to collect these 3D cross sections is
    probably the hardest thing I've ever done with an ROV," said Knute
    Brekke, chief pilot for ROV Doc Ricketts. "We were using a 12,000 pound
    robot to move a millimeter-thick laser sheet back and forth through a
    larvacean and its fist-sized mucus filter that was drifting hundreds of
    meters below the ocean surface." Combining three-dimensional models
    of larvacean filters with observations of flow patterns through the
    filters, Katija and her collaborators were able, for the first time,
    to identify the shape and function of different parts of the larvacean's
    inner filter. Using 3D rendering software, they were able to virtually
    "fly through" the inner filter and study the flow of fluid and particles through different parts of the filter.

    "Now we have a technique for understanding the form of these complex structures, and how they function," Katija explained. "No one has done in
    situ 3D reconstructions of mucus forms like this before." "Among other
    things, we're hoping to understand how larvaceans build and inflate
    these structures," she continued. "This could help us design better 3D
    printers or build complex inflatable structures that could be used in
    a number of environments," including underwater and in outer space.

    Expanding on this work, members of the Bioinspiration Lab are
    experimenting with new 3D plenoptic imaging systems that can capture highly-precise information about the intensity, color, and direction of
    light in a scene. They are also collaborating on the development of new underwater robots that will be able to follow gelatinous animals through
    the water for hours or days at a time.

    "In this paper, we have demonstrated a new system that operates well
    with a variety of underwater vehicles and midwater organisms," said
    Katija. "Now that we have a tool to study the mucus filtering systems
    found throughout the ocean, we can finally bring to light some of nature's
    most complex structures." "DeepPIV has revealed a marvel of natural engineering in the structure of these complex and intricate filtering
    webs," said Robison. "And in DeepPIV, human engineering has produced
    a powerful new tool for investigating these and other mysteries of the
    deep ocean."

    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by
    Monterey_Bay_Aquarium_Research_Institute. Original written by Kim Fulton-Bennett. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Kakani Katija, Giancarlo Troni, Joost Daniels, Kelly Lance, Rob E.

    Sherlock, Alana D. Sherman, Bruce H. Robison. Revealing enigmatic
    mucus structures in the deep sea using DeepPIV. Nature, 2020; DOI:
    10.1038/ s41586-020-2345-2 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/06/200603132341.htm https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/06/200603132341.htm

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