Department of Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA.
J Exp Biol. 2010 Oct 15;213(Pt 20):3496-504. doi: 10.1242/jeb.047233.
Resisting impact and avoiding injury are central to survival in situations ranging from the abiotic forces of crashing waves to biotic collisions with aggressive conspecifics. Although impacts and collisions in biology are ubiquitous, most studies focus on the material properties of biological structures under static loading. Here, we examine the mechanical impact properties of the mantis shrimp's telson, a piece of abdominal armor that withstands repeated, intense impacts from the potent hammer-like appendages used by conspecifics during ritualized fighting. We measured the coefficient of restitution, an index of elasticity, of the telson and compared it with that of an adjacent abdominal segment that is not impacted. We found that the telson behaves more like an inelastic punching bag than an elastic trampoline, dissipating 69% of the impact energy. Furthermore, although the abdominal segment provides no mechanical correlates with size, the telson's coefficient of restitution, displacement and impact duration all correlate with body size. The telson's mineralization patterns were determined through micro-CT (Computed Tomography) and correspond to the mechanical behavior of the telson during impact. The mineralized central region of the telson 'punched' inward during an impact whereas the surrounding areas provided elasticity owing to their reduced mineralization. Thus, the telson effectively dissipates impact energy while potentially providing the size-related information crucial to its role in conspecific assessment. This study reveals the mechanical infrastructure of impact resistance in biological armor and opens a new window to the biomechanical underpinnings of animal behavior and assessment.
抵抗冲击和避免受伤是生物在各种环境中生存的关键,从生物力的破浪冲击到生物碰撞的侵略同类。虽然生物学中的冲击和碰撞无处不在,但大多数研究都集中在静态加载下生物结构的材料特性上。在这里,我们研究了螳螂虾尾扇的机械冲击特性,这是一种腹部盔甲,能够承受同类在仪式化战斗中使用的强大锤状附肢的反复强烈冲击。我们测量了尾扇的恢复系数,这是一个弹性指标,并将其与未受冲击的相邻腹部节段进行了比较。我们发现,尾扇的行为更像是一个无弹性的沙袋,而不是有弹性的蹦床,它消耗了 69%的冲击能量。此外,尽管腹部节段与大小没有机械相关性,但尾扇的恢复系数、位移和冲击持续时间都与身体大小相关。尾扇的矿化模式是通过微 CT(计算机断层扫描)确定的,与尾扇在冲击过程中的机械行为相对应。冲击时,尾扇的矿化中心区域向内“打孔”,而周围区域由于矿化程度降低而提供弹性。因此,尾扇有效地消耗了冲击能量,同时可能提供了对同类评估至关重要的大小相关信息。这项研究揭示了生物装甲抵抗冲击的机械结构,并为动物行为和评估的生物力学基础开辟了一个新的窗口。