Cargando…

Adaptive camouflage: what can be learned from the wetting behaviour of the tropical flat bugs Dysodius lunatus and Dysodius magnus

The neotropical flat bug species Dysodius lunatus and Dysodius magnus show a fascinating camouflage principle, as their appearance renders the animal hardly visible on the bark of trees. However, when getting wet due to rain, bark changes its colour and gets darker. In order to keep the camouflage e...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Hischen, Florian, Reiswich, Vladislav, Kupsch, Desirée, De Mecquenem, Ninon, Riedel, Michael, Himmelsbach, Markus, Weth, Agnes, Heiss, Ernst, Armbruster, Oskar, Heitz, Johannes, Baumgartner, Werner
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Company of Biologists Ltd 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5576082/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28811303
http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/bio.026070
_version_ 1783260138820337664
author Hischen, Florian
Reiswich, Vladislav
Kupsch, Desirée
De Mecquenem, Ninon
Riedel, Michael
Himmelsbach, Markus
Weth, Agnes
Heiss, Ernst
Armbruster, Oskar
Heitz, Johannes
Baumgartner, Werner
author_facet Hischen, Florian
Reiswich, Vladislav
Kupsch, Desirée
De Mecquenem, Ninon
Riedel, Michael
Himmelsbach, Markus
Weth, Agnes
Heiss, Ernst
Armbruster, Oskar
Heitz, Johannes
Baumgartner, Werner
author_sort Hischen, Florian
collection PubMed
description The neotropical flat bug species Dysodius lunatus and Dysodius magnus show a fascinating camouflage principle, as their appearance renders the animal hardly visible on the bark of trees. However, when getting wet due to rain, bark changes its colour and gets darker. In order to keep the camouflage effect, it seems that some Dysodius species benefit from their ability to hold a water film on their cuticle and therefore change their optical properties when also wetted by water. This camouflage behaviour requires the insect to have a hydrophilic surface and passive surface structures which facilitate the liquid spreading. Here we show morphological and chemical characterisations of the surface, especially the cuticular waxes of D. magnus. Scanning electron microscopy revealed that the animal is covered with pillar-like microstructures which, in combination with a surprising chemical hydrophilicity of the cuticle waxes, render the bug almost superhydrophilic: water spreads immediately across the surface. We could theoretically model this behaviour assuming the effect of hemi-wicking (a state in which a droplet sits on a rough surface, partwise imbibing the structure around).  Additionally the principle was abstracted and a laser-patterned polymer surface, mimicking the structure and contact angle of Dysodius wax, shows exactly the behaviour of the natural role model – immediate spreading of water and the formation of a thin continuous water film changing optical properties of the surface.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5576082
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2017
publisher The Company of Biologists Ltd
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-55760822017-09-11 Adaptive camouflage: what can be learned from the wetting behaviour of the tropical flat bugs Dysodius lunatus and Dysodius magnus Hischen, Florian Reiswich, Vladislav Kupsch, Desirée De Mecquenem, Ninon Riedel, Michael Himmelsbach, Markus Weth, Agnes Heiss, Ernst Armbruster, Oskar Heitz, Johannes Baumgartner, Werner Biol Open Research Article The neotropical flat bug species Dysodius lunatus and Dysodius magnus show a fascinating camouflage principle, as their appearance renders the animal hardly visible on the bark of trees. However, when getting wet due to rain, bark changes its colour and gets darker. In order to keep the camouflage effect, it seems that some Dysodius species benefit from their ability to hold a water film on their cuticle and therefore change their optical properties when also wetted by water. This camouflage behaviour requires the insect to have a hydrophilic surface and passive surface structures which facilitate the liquid spreading. Here we show morphological and chemical characterisations of the surface, especially the cuticular waxes of D. magnus. Scanning electron microscopy revealed that the animal is covered with pillar-like microstructures which, in combination with a surprising chemical hydrophilicity of the cuticle waxes, render the bug almost superhydrophilic: water spreads immediately across the surface. We could theoretically model this behaviour assuming the effect of hemi-wicking (a state in which a droplet sits on a rough surface, partwise imbibing the structure around).  Additionally the principle was abstracted and a laser-patterned polymer surface, mimicking the structure and contact angle of Dysodius wax, shows exactly the behaviour of the natural role model – immediate spreading of water and the formation of a thin continuous water film changing optical properties of the surface. The Company of Biologists Ltd 2017-07-27 /pmc/articles/PMC5576082/ /pubmed/28811303 http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/bio.026070 Text en © 2017. Published by The Company of Biologists Ltd http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium provided that the original work is properly attributed.
spellingShingle Research Article
Hischen, Florian
Reiswich, Vladislav
Kupsch, Desirée
De Mecquenem, Ninon
Riedel, Michael
Himmelsbach, Markus
Weth, Agnes
Heiss, Ernst
Armbruster, Oskar
Heitz, Johannes
Baumgartner, Werner
Adaptive camouflage: what can be learned from the wetting behaviour of the tropical flat bugs Dysodius lunatus and Dysodius magnus
title Adaptive camouflage: what can be learned from the wetting behaviour of the tropical flat bugs Dysodius lunatus and Dysodius magnus
title_full Adaptive camouflage: what can be learned from the wetting behaviour of the tropical flat bugs Dysodius lunatus and Dysodius magnus
title_fullStr Adaptive camouflage: what can be learned from the wetting behaviour of the tropical flat bugs Dysodius lunatus and Dysodius magnus
title_full_unstemmed Adaptive camouflage: what can be learned from the wetting behaviour of the tropical flat bugs Dysodius lunatus and Dysodius magnus
title_short Adaptive camouflage: what can be learned from the wetting behaviour of the tropical flat bugs Dysodius lunatus and Dysodius magnus
title_sort adaptive camouflage: what can be learned from the wetting behaviour of the tropical flat bugs dysodius lunatus and dysodius magnus
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5576082/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28811303
http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/bio.026070
work_keys_str_mv AT hischenflorian adaptivecamouflagewhatcanbelearnedfromthewettingbehaviourofthetropicalflatbugsdysodiuslunatusanddysodiusmagnus
AT reiswichvladislav adaptivecamouflagewhatcanbelearnedfromthewettingbehaviourofthetropicalflatbugsdysodiuslunatusanddysodiusmagnus
AT kupschdesiree adaptivecamouflagewhatcanbelearnedfromthewettingbehaviourofthetropicalflatbugsdysodiuslunatusanddysodiusmagnus
AT demecquenemninon adaptivecamouflagewhatcanbelearnedfromthewettingbehaviourofthetropicalflatbugsdysodiuslunatusanddysodiusmagnus
AT riedelmichael adaptivecamouflagewhatcanbelearnedfromthewettingbehaviourofthetropicalflatbugsdysodiuslunatusanddysodiusmagnus
AT himmelsbachmarkus adaptivecamouflagewhatcanbelearnedfromthewettingbehaviourofthetropicalflatbugsdysodiuslunatusanddysodiusmagnus
AT wethagnes adaptivecamouflagewhatcanbelearnedfromthewettingbehaviourofthetropicalflatbugsdysodiuslunatusanddysodiusmagnus
AT heissernst adaptivecamouflagewhatcanbelearnedfromthewettingbehaviourofthetropicalflatbugsdysodiuslunatusanddysodiusmagnus
AT armbrusteroskar adaptivecamouflagewhatcanbelearnedfromthewettingbehaviourofthetropicalflatbugsdysodiuslunatusanddysodiusmagnus
AT heitzjohannes adaptivecamouflagewhatcanbelearnedfromthewettingbehaviourofthetropicalflatbugsdysodiuslunatusanddysodiusmagnus
AT baumgartnerwerner adaptivecamouflagewhatcanbelearnedfromthewettingbehaviourofthetropicalflatbugsdysodiuslunatusanddysodiusmagnus