Extreme positive allometry of animal adhesive pads and the size limits of adhesion-based climbing

被引:116
作者
Labonte, David [1 ]
Clemente, Christofer J. [2 ]
Dittrich, Alex [3 ]
Kuo, Chi-Yun [4 ]
Crosby, Alfred J. [5 ]
Irschick, Duncan J. [4 ]
Federle, Walter [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Cambridge, Dept Zool, Downing St, Cambridge CB2 3EJ, England
[2] Univ Sunshine Coast, Sch Sci & Engn, Sippy Downs, Qld 4556, Australia
[3] Anglia Ruskin Univ, Dept Life Sci, Cambridge CB1 1PT, England
[4] Univ Massachusetts, Dept Biol, Amherst, MA 01003 USA
[5] Univ Massachusetts, Dept Polymer Sci & Engn, Amherst, MA 01003 USA
基金
英国生物技术与生命科学研究理事会;
关键词
scaling; adhesion; evolution; bio-inspired adhesives; DIVISION-OF-LABOR; ATTACHMENT PADS; REVISED CLASSIFICATION; BEETLE ATTACHMENT; FRICTIONAL FORCES; FRACTAL GEOMETRY; GECKO ADHESION; SURFACE-AREA; TREE FROGS; TOE PADS;
D O I
10.1073/pnas.1519459113
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
070301 [无机化学]; 070403 [天体物理学]; 070507 [自然资源与国土空间规划学]; 090105 [作物生产系统与生态工程];
摘要
Organismal functions are size-dependent whenever body surfaces supply body volumes. Larger organisms can develop strongly folded internal surfaces for enhanced diffusion, but in many cases areas cannot be folded so that their enlargement is constrained by anatomy, presenting a problem for larger animals. Here, we study the allometry of adhesive pad area in 225 climbing animal species, covering more than seven orders of magnitude in weight. Across all taxa, adhesive pad area showed extreme positive allometry and scaled with weight, implying a 200-fold increase of relative pad area from mites to geckos. However, allometric scaling coefficients for pad area systematically decreased with taxonomic level and were close to isometry when evolutionary history was accounted for, indicating that the substantial anatomical changes required to achieve this increase in relative pad area are limited by phylogenetic constraints. Using a comparative phylogenetic approach, we found that the departure from isometry is almost exclusively caused by large differences in size-corrected pad area between arthropods and vertebrates. To mitigate the expected decrease of weight-specific adhesion within closely related taxa where pad area scaled close to isometry, data for several taxa suggest that the pads' adhesive strength increased for larger animals. The combination of adjustments in relative pad area for distantly related taxa and changes in adhesive strength for closely related groups helps explain how climbing with adhesive pads has evolved in animals varying over seven orders of magnitude in body weight. Our results illustrate the size limits of adhesion-based climbing, with profound implications for large-scale bio-inspired adhesives.
引用
收藏
页码:1297 / 1302
页数:6
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