Today.Az » Weird / Interesting » Hummingbirds catch flying bugs with the help of fast-closing beaks
20 July 2011 [20:40] - Today.Az
The shape of a hummingbird's beak allows for a "controlled elastic snap"
that allows it to snatch up flying insects in a mere fraction of a
second -- with greater speed and power than could be achieved by jaw
muscles alone, says a new study in a forthcoming issue of Journal of Theoretical Biology.
Hummingbird beaks are built to feed on flowers, but hummingbirds
can't live on nectar alone. To get enough protein and nutrients they
need to eat small insects too, said co-author Gregor Yanega of the
National Evolutionary Synthesis Center in Durham, North Carolina.
"Hummingbirds need the equivalent of 300 fruit flies a day to survive," Yanega said.
But how can a long, slender bill so well suited for sipping nectar also be good at catching insects, and often in mid-air?
In 2004 in the journal Nature, Yanega and University of Connecticut
biologist Margaret Rubega reported that part of the answer lies in the
hummingbird's flexible bill. Using high speed video of three hummingbird
species catching fruit flies, the researchers found that the
hummingbird's bendy lower beak flexes by as much as 25 degrees when it
opens, while also widening at the base to create a larger surface for
catching insects.
While watching the ultrafast videos, however, Yanega also noticed
something else: As soon as the hummingbird's beak is maximally bent, it
suddenly springs back to its original position and snaps closed.
"Their beaks snap shut in less than a hundredth of a second," he explained. "It's fast."
Yanega teamed up with engineers Matthew Smith and Andy Ruina of
Cornell University to unlock the secret to the hummingbird beak's sudden
snap. Armed with data on the length, thickness, and density of the
bones and muscles in the hummingbird's head, the researchers developed a
mathematical model of the elastic energy in the beak from the time it
flexes open to the time it snaps shut.
Part of the trick lies in how the hummingbird's beak is built, the
authors said. While other insect-eating birds such as swifts and
nighthawks have a cartilaginous hinge near the base of their beaks,
hummingbird beaks are solid bone.
"They're also incredibly thin," Yanega said. "This makes their lower beaks stiff yet springy, like a diving board."
The researchers' mathematical model revealed that the downward bend
of the hummingbird's lower beak puts stress on the bone, storing elastic
energy which eventually powers its sudden snap closure, explained first
author Matthew Smith, now at the Air Force Research Laboratory at
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.
"The extra speed likely leads to greater success in catching insects," Smith said.
Known as snap-buckling, the phenomenon is similar to the opening and
closing of a snap hair clip, Smith said. "Or, remember those little
pop-up toys that consist of a half sphere made of rubber? When you
invert one and set it on a hard surface it will eventually snap back
into place and jump off the surface," Smith added.
Snap-buckling has also been observed in plants and insects. "The
classic example of snap-buckling in plants is the venus flytrap, which
uses this trick to catch insects," Smith said. "Cicadas, too, have tiny
ribs which they snap-buckle to produce their distinctive song."
This study marks the first time snap-buckling has been observed in vertebrates, the authors added. /Science Daily/
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