Abstract

Shear-induced adhesion is one of the key properties for the gecko moving safely and quickly in a three-dimensional environment. The control strategies of such locomotion strongly relying on adhesion are still not well understood. In this study, we measured foot alignment and three-dimensional reaction forces of the single toes of the Tokay gecko running on the ground freely (gravity condition) and running in a situation where the gravity force was counterbalanced (reduced gravity condition). The forelimb rotated from the outward position to the front-facing position and the hindlimb rotated from the outward position to the rear-facing position, when running with balanced force, which indicated that the adhesive system was employed behaviorally through the modulation of the foot alignment. The toe was compressed and pulled in the gravity condition, but it was tensed and pulled in the reduced gravity condition. There was an approximately linear relationship between peak normal forces and the corresponding shear forces in both the reduced gravity condition (FN = −0.40FS − 0.008) and the gravity condition (FN = 2.70FS − 0.12). The footpad was compressed and pushed in the gravity condition, whereas it was tensed and pulled in the reduced gravity condition. There was an approximately linear relationship between peak normal forces and the corresponding shear forces in both the reduced gravity condition (FN = −0.39FS − 0.001) and in the gravity condition (FN = −2.80FS − 0.08). The shear-induced adhesion of the gecko footpad is controlled by the coupling of the normal force and shear forces: that is why in this system adhesion was shear-sensitive and friction was load-sensitive. Our measurements of single toe reaction forces also show that geckos control their footpad attachment using ‘toe rolling-in and gripping’ motion in both gravity and reduced gravity conditions.

Highlights

  • Geckos are able to run on vertical and even inverted surfaces as fast as other terrestrial animals can run on normal ground

  • The spread angle had no significant difference between gravity condition and reduced gravity

  • As aa toe toe approaches approaches the the surface, surface, aa small small loading loading force force perpendicular perpendicular to to the the contact surface and a short drag parallel to the contact surface is applied to orient and preload setae contact surface and a short drag parallel to the contact surface is applied to orient and preload setae

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Summary

Introduction

Geckos are able to run on vertical and even inverted surfaces as fast as other terrestrial animals can run on normal ground. Patterns of ground reaction forces show that geckos can control attachment and detachment via shear forces, by pulling their legs towards or pushing their legs away from the body [1,4]. Separate parts of this control system seem to be established at different levels of the hierarchical organization of this adhesive system [5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13].

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