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弹性毛细作用在蝴蝶和飞蛾口器的自我修复中的作用。

Elastocapillary effect in self-repair of proboscises of butterflies and moths.

机构信息

Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Clemson University, United States.

Department of Plant & Environmental Sciences, Clemson University, United States.

出版信息

J Colloid Interface Sci. 2021 Nov;601:734-745. doi: 10.1016/j.jcis.2021.05.106. Epub 2021 May 23.

Abstract

HYPOTHESIS

Self-repair in living organisms, without tissue regeneration or regrowth, is rare. Recent discovery that butterflies can self-repair the proboscis after the two halves (galeae) have been separated raised a question about the physical mechanism allowing them to reunite the parts. We discovered that butterflies pump saliva during repair of their proboscises. We then hypothesized that saliva spreading along the food canal of the proboscis would create capillary forces capable of bringing the galeae together.

EXPERIMENT

To test the hypothesis, we distinguished capillary forces from muscular action of the galeae by sedating butterflies and video tracking retraction of the saliva menisci during galeal separation. To theoretically show capillary adhesion, the elastic moduli of the galeae were measured, and the galeal profiles were extracted from videos as a function of time. The values were then fitted with a mathematical model based on an augmented Euler-Bernoulli beam theory whereby each galea was treated as a beam bent by capillary forces due to saliva. We also evaluated friction forces that prevented disjoining of the galea at the tip of their separation.

FINDINGS

The results showed that butterflies use saliva to repair their proboscises via capillary adhesion, and theoretically supported the role of saliva in providing the necessary capillary forces to bring the galeae together. Tangential shear forces acting parallel to the galea at the tip of their separation are caused primarily by friction between the cuticular linking structures.

摘要

假设

在生物体中,没有组织再生或再生长的自我修复是罕见的。最近发现蝴蝶可以在两半(触角)分开后自行修复喙,这就提出了一个问题,即是什么物理机制使它们能够重新连接这些部分。我们发现蝴蝶在修复喙时会分泌唾液。因此,我们假设唾液沿着喙的食物通道扩散会产生能够使触角合拢的毛细作用力。

实验

为了验证这一假设,我们通过给蝴蝶镇静并视频跟踪触角分离过程中唾液半月板的回缩,区分了毛细作用力和触角的肌肉作用。为了从理论上展示毛细粘附力,我们测量了触角的弹性模量,并根据时间从视频中提取触角的轮廓。然后,将这些值拟合到一个基于扩充的欧拉-伯努利梁理论的数学模型中,根据该理论,每个触角都被视为由于唾液而被毛细作用力弯曲的梁。我们还评估了防止触角在分离尖端分离的摩擦力。

结果

结果表明,蝴蝶通过毛细粘附作用利用唾液来修复喙,并且从理论上支持了唾液在提供将触角合拢所需的毛细作用力方面的作用。在它们分离的尖端,与触角平行作用的切向剪切力主要是由表皮连接结构之间的摩擦力引起的。

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