Issue 10, 2017

Predation with the tongue through viscous adhesion, a scaling approach

Abstract

Some predators, mainly lizards and amphibians, capture their prey with their tongue. The process of capture involves strong adhesion mechanisms to overcome inertial forces that should be related to a viscous mucus produced at the tongue tip. A scaling model of prey capture independent of the anatomic details of the animals is developed from a study of viscous adhesion with a probe-tack geometry. This model is then successfully applied to describe the nonlinear evolution of the maximum prey size with the predator length for chameleons. This approach of prey capture defines a new framework that should help biophysicists and biologists to study more quantitatively the adhesion mechanisms for various animals and biological processes.

Graphical abstract: Predation with the tongue through viscous adhesion, a scaling approach

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
19 Jan 2017
Accepted
30 Jan 2017
First published
10 Feb 2017

Soft Matter, 2017,13, 2120-2124

Predation with the tongue through viscous adhesion, a scaling approach

M. Houze and P. Damman, Soft Matter, 2017, 13, 2120 DOI: 10.1039/C7SM00134G

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