Animal cells in large scale bioreactors are subjected to a variety of fluid forces for which they are not adapted by evolution. In severe cases the result is cell death, but under more modest agitation conditions an increasing number of nonlethal responses affecting growth rate, metabolism, and product formation have been reported. The forces causing these responses have not been characterized because particle-turbulence interactions are extremely complex. The current understanding of the microscopic structure of turbulence in an infinite liquid and in boundary layers shows that an average shear stress alone is not likely to be adequate to describe the bioreactor environment. Combining knowledge of the physical stimuli and the biological responses will lead to better ways of limiting cell damage and possibly to using physical stresses as a means of specifically modifying cell behavior.