Swimming kinematics Molluscan pteropods develop their feet into a pair of wing-like parapodia in the growing phase. These 'wings' are highly flexible, as the orientation of the muscles is different, and they have a
hydrostatic skeleton filled with a pressurized fluid. Thus, the high bending-angle supports the parapodia to diminish the
drag forces generated by the classic "
clap-and-fling" maneuver; additionally, it aids in carrying the extra weight of a shell and ascending the water column for the
diel vertical migration. The power-stroke for
L. helicina starts with a sharp rotation of it is body accompanied by an increase in swimming speed; it then rotates its shell in the opposite direction to initiate the recovery-stroke and swims upward, with a speed less than the power phase. There is a drop in overall speed between power and recovery strokes, which develop a
sawtooth trajectory in the
sagittal plane. The hyper-pitch of the round shell of
L. helicina diminishes the rotational drag and the moment of
inertia; the extreme shell rotation also assists in raising the wingtips at the end of each stroke to create a figure-eight pattern, common for
flying insects. In contrast, flying insects and shell-less pteropods encounter higher resistance forces that limit the body rotation. Sea butterflies range from the tropics Occasionally, thecosomans swarm in large numbers, and can sometimes be found washed ashore in
flotsam, especially along the coastline of
eastern Australia.
Diurnal vertical migration Thecosomata beat their wing-like parapodia to "fly" through the water. When descending to deeper water, they hold their wings up. They
migrate vertically from day to night, so the community structure changes on a 24 hour cycle; during the day many organisms take refuge at water depths in excess of 100 m. Measuring up to 5 cm wide—many times larger than their own bodies. If disturbed, they simply abandon the web and flap slowly away. Each day, they embark on a regular
diel vertical migration through the water column in their pursuit of planktonic prey. At night, they forage at the surface and return to deeper waters by the morning. == Fossil record ==