Why Are There So Few Aerial Plankton?
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Air and Water, by Mark Denny. |
In his book Air and Water, Mark Denny asks an oddball question: Why are there so few aerial plankton? In my mind, this question transforms into: Why are there no flying blue whales, sucking in mouthfuls of air and filtering out tiny organisms for food? Here is what Denny says:
A general characteristic of aquatic (especially marine) environments is the presence of planktonic life. A cubic meter of water taken from virtually anywhere in a stream, lake, or ocean is teeming with small, suspended organisms. In fact, the concentration of these plants and animals is such that many kinds of invertebrates, including clams, mussels, anemones, polychaete worms, and bryozoans, can reliably use planktonic particles as their sole source of food. In contrast, air is relatively devoid of suspended matter. A cubic meter of air might contain a few bacteria, a pollen grain or two, and very occasionally a flying insect or wind-borne seed. Air is so depauperate compared to the aquatic ‘soup’ that few terrestrial animals manage to make a living by straining their food from the surrounding fluid. Web-building spiders are the only example that comes to mind.
To understand why, my first inclination is to examine the balance between gravity, thermal motion, and concentration. You can use a Boltzmann factor, e–mgh/kBT, to determine how the concentration changes with height h, assuming particles of mass m are in contact with a fluid at temperature T (g is the acceleration of gravity and kB is Boltzmann’s constant). But there’s one problem: the Peclet number is often large, meaning advection dominates diffusion. In other words, air or water currents are more effective than diffusion for mixing (like in a blender). In many cases the problem is even worse: the flow is turbulent, which tends to mix materials much more rapidly than diffusion does. In some ways the analysis of turbulent mixing is similar to the case of diffusion. The flux of particles is proportional to the concentration gradient, but the constant of proportionality is not the diffusion constant but instead the turbulent diffusivity. Denny does the analysis in more detail than I can go into here (turbulent flow is always complex). But he states his conclusion clearly and simply
The sinking rates of particles in air are just too high to allow them to remain passively suspended and as a result, aerial plankton are sparse. In water, slow sinking speeds insure that many particles are suspended, and the plankton is plentiful. The abundance of aquatic suspension feeders and the scarcity of terrestrial ones, can therefore be thought of as a direct consequence of the differences in density and viscosity between air and water.
One other factor plays a role here: buoyancy. If the small organisms have a density approximately that of water, then tiny aquatic animals would be almost neutrally buoyant, so they’d be easy to suspend. In air, however, buoyancy plays almost no roll, so these little animals “seem” to be much denser.
It looks like I should abandon my search for a giant flying suspension feeder, resembling a blimp with a big mouth to suck in large amounts of air that it filters to extract food. Too bad. I was looking forward to befriending one, if the physics had only allowed it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NivDXM88oCo
Source: http://hobbieroth.blogspot.com/2025/09/why-are-there-so-few-aerial-plankton.html
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