Walthaus Olivia K, Deegala Dilanka I, Delattre Raphael, Labonte David
Department of Bioengineering, Imperial College London, London, UK.
J R Soc Interface. 2025 Sep;22(230):20250091. doi: 10.1098/rsif.2025.0091. Epub 2025 Sep 10.
Insects and plants have been locked in an evolutionary arms race spanning 350 million years. Insects evolved specialized tools to cut into plant tissue, and plants, to counter these attacks, developed diverse defence strategies. Much previous worked has focused on chemical defences. How can plants vary their mechanical properties to deter herbivores, and how can insects respond? We test a simple mechanical model that relates the force required to cut thin, leaf-like tissues to their mechanical properties and the geometry of the cutting tool. To remove the confounding effects of tool shape across size, we use leaf-cutter ant mandibles as a model system. Cutting forces were measured for pristine and worn mandibles that vary by one order of magnitude in size, using a custom-built fibre-optic set-up and homogeneous pseudoleaves as well as a set of plant tissues as model substrates. The results substantially support the model, enabling quantitative predictions. Fracture toughness is identified as a key mechanical defence trait for plants, cutting edge radius as the critical geometric property of the insect mandible and cutting edge wear consequently emerges as a key modulator of cutting forces, elevating it up to fivefold above a physical minimum. Thus, plants may be served by implementing strategies that maximize wear, whereas insects should seek to minimize it.
昆虫和植物已经陷入了一场长达3.5亿年的进化军备竞赛。昆虫进化出了专门的工具来切入植物组织,而植物为了应对这些攻击,也发展出了多种防御策略。此前的许多研究都集中在化学防御上。植物如何改变其机械特性以抵御食草动物,昆虫又会如何应对?我们测试了一个简单的力学模型,该模型将切割薄的叶状组织所需的力与其机械特性以及切割工具的几何形状联系起来。为了消除工具形状在不同尺寸上的混杂影响,我们使用切叶蚁的下颚作为模型系统。使用定制的光纤装置、均匀的假叶以及一组植物组织作为模型底物,测量了大小相差一个数量级的原始和磨损下颚的切割力。结果充分支持了该模型,从而能够进行定量预测。断裂韧性被确定为植物的关键机械防御特性,刀刃半径是昆虫下颚的关键几何特性,因此刀刃磨损成为切割力的关键调节因素,使切割力比物理最小值提高了五倍之多。因此,植物可能通过实施使磨损最大化的策略来受益,而昆虫则应设法将磨损最小化。