Department of Biology, Tabor College, Hillsboro, KS 67063-1799, USA.
J Exp Biol. 2013 Sep 15;216(Pt 18):3388-94. doi: 10.1242/jeb.085571.
Spiders in the Orbiculariae spin orb webs that dissipate the mechanical energy of their flying prey, bringing the insects to rest and retaining them long enough for the spider to attack and subdue their meals. Small prey are easily stopped by webs but provide little energetic gain. While larger prey offer substantial nourishment, they are also challenging to capture and can damage the web if they escape. We therefore hypothesized that spider orb webs exhibit properties that improve their probability of stopping larger insects while minimizing damage when the mechanical energy of those prey exceeds the web's capacity. Large insects are typically both heavier and faster flying than smaller prey, but speed plays a disproportionate role in determining total kinetic energy, so we predicted that orb webs may dissipate energy more effectively under faster impacts, independent of kinetic energy per se. We used high-speed video to visualize the impact of wooden pellets fired into orb webs to simulate prey strikes and tested how capture probability varied as a function of pellet size and speed. Capture probability was virtually nil above speeds of ~3 m s(-1). However, successful captures do not directly measure the maximum possible energy dissipation by orb webs because these events include lower-energy impacts that may not significantly challenge orb web performance. Therefore, we also compared the total kinetic energy removed from projectiles that escaped orb webs by breaking through the silk, asking whether more energy was removed at faster speeds. Over a range of speeds relevant to insect flight, the amount of energy absorbed by orb webs increases with the speed of prey (i.e. the rates at which webs are stretched). Orb webs therefore respond to faster - and hence higher kinetic energy - prey with better performance, suggesting adaptation to capture larger and faster flying insect prey. This speed-dependent toughness of a complex structure suggests the utility of the intrinsic toughness of spider silk and/or features of the macro-design of webs for high-velocity industrial or military applications, such as ballistic energy absorption.
蜘蛛在 Orbiculariae 中纺制的蛛网会耗散飞行猎物的机械能,使昆虫停下来,并在足够长的时间内让蜘蛛攻击并制服它们的食物。小猎物很容易被蛛网阻止,但提供的能量很少。虽然较大的猎物提供了大量的营养,但它们也很难捕捉,如果它们逃脱,可能会损坏蛛网。因此,我们假设蜘蛛的蛛网具有这样的特性:在阻止更大的昆虫的同时,最大限度地减少其机械能量超过网的容量时的损坏。大型昆虫通常比小型猎物更重、飞行速度更快,但速度在确定总动能方面起着不成比例的作用,因此我们预测,在更快的冲击下,蛛网可能会更有效地耗散能量,而与动能本身无关。我们使用高速摄像机可视化了木制弹丸射入蛛网以模拟猎物撞击的过程,并测试了捕获概率如何随弹丸大小和速度的变化而变化。当速度超过~3 m s(-1)时,捕获概率几乎为零。然而,成功的捕获并不能直接衡量蛛网可能的最大能量耗散,因为这些事件包括可能不会显著挑战蛛网性能的低能量冲击。因此,我们还比较了通过突破丝线而从逃脱蛛网的射弹中去除的总动能,询问在更快的速度下是否会去除更多的能量。在与昆虫飞行相关的一系列速度范围内,蛛网吸收的能量随着猎物速度(即蛛网拉伸的速度)的增加而增加。因此,蛛网对速度更快(即动能更高)的猎物的反应更好,这表明它们适应了捕捉更大和飞行速度更快的昆虫猎物。这种复杂结构的速度依赖性韧性表明,蜘蛛丝的固有韧性和/或蛛网宏观设计的特征对于高速工业或军事应用(如弹道能量吸收)具有实用性。