Tuesday, 31 May 2011

Examining The Hummingbird Tongue



Hummingbirds can extend their tongues great distances — in some cases the length of their heads — to retrieve nectar. Biologist Margaret Rubega, of the University of Connecticut, explains how the structure of the hummingbird tongue traps liquid, and the evolution tales tongues tell.


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

Alejandro Rico-Guevara1 and Margaret A. Rubega
PNAS May 2, 2011

Abstract

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 not function like a pair of tiny, static tubes drawing up floral nectar via capillary action. Instead, we show that the tongue tip is a dynamic liquid-trapping device that changes configuration and shape dramatically as it moves in and out of fluids. We also show that the tongue–fluid interactions are identical in both living and dead birds, demonstrating that this mechanism is a function of the tongue structure itself, and therefore highly efficient because no energy expenditure by the bird is required to drive the opening and closing of the trap. Our results rule out previous conclusions from capillarity-based models of nectar feeding and highlight the necessity of developing a new biophysical model for nectar intake in hummingbirds. Our findings have ramifications for the study of feeding mechanics in other nectarivorous birds, and for the understanding of the evolution of nectarivory in general. We propose a conceptual mechanical explanation for this unique fluid-trapping capacity, with far-reaching practical applications (e.g., biomimetics).

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Louie Schwartzberg: The hidden beauty of pollination


Pollination: it's vital to life on Earth, but largely unseen by the human eye. Filmmaker Louie Schwartzberg shows us the intricate world of pollen and pollinators with gorgeous high-speed images from his film "Wings of Life," inspired by the vanishing of one of nature's primary pollinators, the honeybee.

Friday, 20 May 2011

All about Ants

Ants are so abundant that mimicking them has become a profitable way of life for many species. Florian Maderspacher and Marcus Stensmyr take a trip into the world of ant mimicry.

Read the article on Current Biology

Friday, 13 May 2011

The Giant Waterlilly

Giant waterlillies in the Amazon -  a beautiful video taken from "The Private Life of Plants" by David Attenborough

 

Tuesday, 10 May 2011

Charles Darwin and the Origins of Plant Evolutionary Developmental Biology



Plant Cell: Charls Darwin was the first person who carefully read and internalize the remarkable advances in the understanding of plant morphogenesis in the 1840s and 1850s, and his notebooks, correspondence, and unpublished manuscripts clearly demonstrate that he had discovered the developmental basis for the evolutionary transformation of plant form

The Plant Cell Online April 2011

Friday, 6 May 2011

Dance of the Dumbo Octopus

This footage of a Dumbo octopus was captured 6600 deep off the coast of Oregon, cool video taken from The Science News Blog

A New Era of Space Exploration

Thursday, 5 May 2011

Nectar: generation, regulation and ecological functions





In the April Issue of Trends in Plant Science, Martin Heil reviews the recent breakthroughs in the research on nectar proteomics and on the multiple roles of invertases in nectar secretion. Read the article.