Hummingbird tongues are elastic micropumps.

نویسندگان

  • Alejandro Rico-Guevara
  • Tai-Hsi Fan
  • Margaret A Rubega
چکیده

Pumping is a vital natural process, imitated by humans for thousands of years. We demonstrate that a hitherto undocumented mechanism of fluid transport pumps nectar onto the hummingbird tongue. Using high-speed cameras, we filmed the tongue-fluid interaction in 18 hummingbird species, from seven of the nine main hummingbird clades. During the offloading of the nectar inside the bill, hummingbirds compress their tongues upon extrusion; the compressed tongue remains flattened until it contacts the nectar. After contact with the nectar surface, the tongue reshapes filling entirely with nectar; we did not observe the formation of menisci required for the operation of capillarity during this process. We show that the tongue works as an elastic micropump; fluid at the tip is driven into the tongue's grooves by forces resulting from re-expansion of a collapsed section. This work falsifies the long-standing idea that capillarity is an important force filling hummingbird tongue grooves during nectar feeding. The expansive filling mechanism we report in this paper recruits elastic recovery properties of the groove walls to load nectar into the tongue an order of magnitude faster than capillarity could. Such fast filling allows hummingbirds to extract nectar at higher rates than predicted by capillarity-based foraging models, in agreement with their fast licking rates.

برای دانلود رایگان متن کامل این مقاله و بیش از 32 میلیون مقاله دیگر ابتدا ثبت نام کنید

ثبت نام

اگر عضو سایت هستید لطفا وارد حساب کاربری خود شوید

منابع مشابه

Relating form to function in the hummingbird feeding apparatus

A complete understanding of the feeding structures is fundamental in order to study how animals survive. Some birds use long and protrusible tongues as the main tool to collect their central caloric source (e.g., woodpeckers and nectarivores). Hummingbirds are the oldest and most diverse clade of nectarivorous vertebrates, being a perfect subject to study tongue specializations. Their tongue fu...

متن کامل

The hummingbird tongue is a fluid trap, not a capillary tube.

Hummingbird tongues pick up a liquid, calorie-dense food that cannot be grasped, a physical challenge that has long inspired the study of nectar-transport mechanics. Existing biophysical models predict optimal hummingbird foraging on the basis of equations that assume that fluid rises through the tongue in the same way as through capillary tubes. We demonstrate that the hummingbird tongue does ...

متن کامل

MEMS-based micropumps in drug delivery and biomedical applications

This paper briefly overviews progress on the development of MEMS-based micropumps and their applications in drug delivery and other iomedical applications such as micrototal analysis systems ( TAS) or lab-on-a-chip and point of care testing systems (POCT). The focus of the eview is to present key features of micropumps such as actuation methods, working principles, construction, fabrication met...

متن کامل

Hummingbird feeding mechanics: comments on the capillarity model.

Kim et al. (1), in their recent paper about optimal nectar concentrations based on liquid extraction mechanisms, reported experiments with hummingbirds that we believe are misleading. In a footnote, they cited our recent study (2) on hummingbird feeding mechanics; however, in contrast to our work, they conclude that capillarity is an important mechanism of tongue loading. They support the use o...

متن کامل

Foraging ability of rufous hummingbirds on hummingbird flowers and hawkmoth flowers.

We examine the suitability of ornithophilous flowers and sphingophilous flowers in Ipompsis and Aquilegia for nectar foraging by the hummingbird Selasphorus rufus. In S. rufus, bill length averages 18.9 mm in females and 17.3 mm in males. Maximal tongue extension approximates bill length, suggesting that birds can feed from floral tubes up to 33.5 mm in length. However, their ability to do so i...

متن کامل

ذخیره در منابع من


  با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید

عنوان ژورنال:
  • Proceedings. Biological sciences

دوره 282 1813  شماره 

صفحات  -

تاریخ انتشار 2015