When the going gets rough – studying the effect of surface roughness on the adhesive abilities of tree frogs

Tree frogs need to adhere to surfaces of various roughnesses in their natural habitats; these include bark, leaves and rocks. Rough surfaces can alter the effectiveness of their toe pads, due to factors such as a change of real contact area and abrasion of the pad epithelium. Here, we tested the eff...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Niall Crawford, Thomas Endlein, Jonathan T. Pham, Mathis Riehle, W. Jon P. Barnes
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Beilstein-Institut 2016-12-01
Series:Beilstein Journal of Nanotechnology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3762/bjnano.7.201
id doaj-6b0b6442e31e41128c497b6da462e745
record_format Article
spelling doaj-6b0b6442e31e41128c497b6da462e7452020-11-25T00:43:33ZengBeilstein-InstitutBeilstein Journal of Nanotechnology2190-42862016-12-01712116213110.3762/bjnano.7.2012190-4286-7-201When the going gets rough – studying the effect of surface roughness on the adhesive abilities of tree frogsNiall Crawford0Thomas Endlein1Jonathan T. Pham2Mathis Riehle3W. Jon P. Barnes4Centre for Cell Engineering, Institute of Molecular Cell and Systems Biology, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, Scotland, UKMax Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems, Stuttgart, GermanyMax Planck Institute for Polymer Research, Mainz, GermanyCentre for Cell Engineering, Institute of Molecular Cell and Systems Biology, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, Scotland, UKCentre for Cell Engineering, Institute of Molecular Cell and Systems Biology, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, Scotland, UKTree frogs need to adhere to surfaces of various roughnesses in their natural habitats; these include bark, leaves and rocks. Rough surfaces can alter the effectiveness of their toe pads, due to factors such as a change of real contact area and abrasion of the pad epithelium. Here, we tested the effect of surface roughness on the attachment abilities of the tree frog Litoria caerulea. This was done by testing shear and adhesive forces on artificial surfaces with controlled roughness, both on single toe pads and whole animal scales. It was shown that frogs can stick 2–3 times better on small scale roughnesses (3–6 µm asperities), producing higher adhesive and frictional forces, but relatively poorly on the larger scale roughnesses tested (58.5–562.5 µm asperities). Our experiments suggested that, on such surfaces, the pads secrete insufficient fluid to fill the space under the pad, leaving air pockets that would significantly reduce the Laplace pressure component of capillarity. Therefore, we measured how well the adhesive toe pad would conform to spherical asperities of known sizes using interference reflection microscopy. Based on experiments where the conformation of the pad to individual asperities was examined microscopically, our calculations indicate that the pad epithelium has a low elastic modulus, making it highly deformable.https://doi.org/10.3762/bjnano.7.201adhesionfrictionLitoria caerulearoughnesstree frog
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Niall Crawford
Thomas Endlein
Jonathan T. Pham
Mathis Riehle
W. Jon P. Barnes
spellingShingle Niall Crawford
Thomas Endlein
Jonathan T. Pham
Mathis Riehle
W. Jon P. Barnes
When the going gets rough – studying the effect of surface roughness on the adhesive abilities of tree frogs
Beilstein Journal of Nanotechnology
adhesion
friction
Litoria caerulea
roughness
tree frog
author_facet Niall Crawford
Thomas Endlein
Jonathan T. Pham
Mathis Riehle
W. Jon P. Barnes
author_sort Niall Crawford
title When the going gets rough – studying the effect of surface roughness on the adhesive abilities of tree frogs
title_short When the going gets rough – studying the effect of surface roughness on the adhesive abilities of tree frogs
title_full When the going gets rough – studying the effect of surface roughness on the adhesive abilities of tree frogs
title_fullStr When the going gets rough – studying the effect of surface roughness on the adhesive abilities of tree frogs
title_full_unstemmed When the going gets rough – studying the effect of surface roughness on the adhesive abilities of tree frogs
title_sort when the going gets rough – studying the effect of surface roughness on the adhesive abilities of tree frogs
publisher Beilstein-Institut
series Beilstein Journal of Nanotechnology
issn 2190-4286
publishDate 2016-12-01
description Tree frogs need to adhere to surfaces of various roughnesses in their natural habitats; these include bark, leaves and rocks. Rough surfaces can alter the effectiveness of their toe pads, due to factors such as a change of real contact area and abrasion of the pad epithelium. Here, we tested the effect of surface roughness on the attachment abilities of the tree frog Litoria caerulea. This was done by testing shear and adhesive forces on artificial surfaces with controlled roughness, both on single toe pads and whole animal scales. It was shown that frogs can stick 2–3 times better on small scale roughnesses (3–6 µm asperities), producing higher adhesive and frictional forces, but relatively poorly on the larger scale roughnesses tested (58.5–562.5 µm asperities). Our experiments suggested that, on such surfaces, the pads secrete insufficient fluid to fill the space under the pad, leaving air pockets that would significantly reduce the Laplace pressure component of capillarity. Therefore, we measured how well the adhesive toe pad would conform to spherical asperities of known sizes using interference reflection microscopy. Based on experiments where the conformation of the pad to individual asperities was examined microscopically, our calculations indicate that the pad epithelium has a low elastic modulus, making it highly deformable.
topic adhesion
friction
Litoria caerulea
roughness
tree frog
url https://doi.org/10.3762/bjnano.7.201
work_keys_str_mv AT niallcrawford whenthegoinggetsroughstudyingtheeffectofsurfaceroughnessontheadhesiveabilitiesoftreefrogs
AT thomasendlein whenthegoinggetsroughstudyingtheeffectofsurfaceroughnessontheadhesiveabilitiesoftreefrogs
AT jonathantpham whenthegoinggetsroughstudyingtheeffectofsurfaceroughnessontheadhesiveabilitiesoftreefrogs
AT mathisriehle whenthegoinggetsroughstudyingtheeffectofsurfaceroughnessontheadhesiveabilitiesoftreefrogs
AT wjonpbarnes whenthegoinggetsroughstudyingtheeffectofsurfaceroughnessontheadhesiveabilitiesoftreefrogs
_version_ 1725277754141704192