Escape and cruise velocities of pelagic copepods as measured in this study and reported in the literature. The dashed lines are power laws fitted to the data, which yield powers of 0.65 and 0.93 for the escape and cruise velocities, respectively. The solid lines are velocities predicted from equation (4.3), either by fitting the expression to the data (cruise velocities, with the propulsion force, F, as the free variable to be estimated), or by computing velocities using an estimate of the coefficient β from the data in figure 8. We used the definition β = F/(πR2) and found the average 101 ± 40 N m−2 (±s.d.; n = 12), with R taken as ½ × 0.42 × length of the copepod from the average aspect ratio of copepods in this study. The literature observations on cruise velocities were taken from the data compilations of Máuchline (1998) and Kiørboe & Bagøien (2005) supplemented with data from Titelman (2003) and Goetze & Kiørboe (2008) as well as own unpublished observations on Acartia grani. Adult males were excluded from the compilation. Literature jump velocities were from Yen & Strickler (1996), Buskey et al. (2002), Waggett & Buskey (2007, 2008), Burdick et al. (2007) and Kiørboe et al. (2009). Regression equations for escape and cruise velocities (v, mm s−1) as functions of prosome length (L, mm) are: logvescape = 2.58 + 0.65logL, r2 = 0.85; logvcruise = 0.38 + 0.93logL. Open circle, Oithona; open triangle, Acartia; open square, Calanus; open inverted triangle, literature, escape; filled circle, literature, cruise.