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Box jellyfish (Tripedalia cystophora): In layered water columns, physical resistance can make the animals' ascent difficult.
Photo Credit: © Jan Bielecki
Scientific Frontline: Extended "At a Glance" Summary: Stratification Drag and Haloclines
The Core Concept: A halocline is a transition zone between water layers of differing salinities that can function as an impenetrable physical barrier to aquatic organisms. This barrier effect is driven by stratification drag, a physical resistance created when an organism's swimming motion displaces denser water into lighter layers.
Key Distinction/Mechanism: Prior theories posited that organisms either actively avoided certain water layers or suffered impaired swimming abilities due to salinity changes. In contrast, this research demonstrates that the interface itself generates stratification drag alongside standard hydrodynamic drag; this decreases buoyancy and increases energy loss, physically blocking the organism regardless of its behavior or physiology.
Origin/History: The phenomenon was initially observed by a Kiel University (CAU) Nanoelectronics research group studying box jellyfish (Tripedalia cystophora) in Everglades National Park following a tropical rain shower. The field observations were subsequently verified under laboratory conditions and published in the Journal of Experimental Biology.




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