Abstract

BackgroundMany insects jump by storing and releasing energy in elastic structures within their bodies. This allows them to release large amounts of energy in a very short time to jump at very high speeds. The fastest of the insect jumpers, the froghopper, uses a catapult-like elastic mechanism to achieve their jumping prowess in which energy, generated by the slow contraction of muscles, is released suddenly to power rapid and synchronous movements of the hind legs. How is this energy stored?ResultsThe hind coxae of the froghopper are linked to the hinges of the ipsilateral hind wings by pleural arches, complex bow-shaped internal skeletal structures. They are built of chitinous cuticle and the rubber-like protein, resilin, which fluoresces bright blue when illuminated with ultra-violet light. The ventral and posterior end of this fluorescent region forms the thoracic part of the pivot with a hind coxa. No other structures in the thorax or hind legs show this blue fluorescence and it is not found in larvae which do not jump. Stimulating one trochanteral depressor muscle in a pattern that simulates its normal action, results in a distortion and forward movement of the posterior part of a pleural arch by 40 μm, but in natural jumping, the movement is at least 100 μm.ConclusionCalculations showed that the resilin itself could only store 1% to 2% of the energy required for jumping. The stiffer cuticular parts of the pleural arches could, however, easily meet all the energy storage needs. The composite structure therefore, combines the stiffness of the chitinous cuticle with the elasticity of resilin. Muscle contractions bend the chitinous cuticle with little deformation and therefore, store the energy needed for jumping, while the resilin rapidly returns its stored energy and thus restores the body to its original shape after a jump and allows repeated jumping.

Highlights

  • Many insects jump by storing and releasing energy in elastic structures within their bodies

  • In preparation for a jump, the muscle contracts for a few seconds without depressing its trochanter, but because the tendon inserts on the trochanter (Figure 1) and the fibres of the two large parts attach to the internal skeleton between the meso- and metathoracic segments, the coxa moves forwards

  • Three lines of evidence indicate that the fluorescence we describe for the pleural arches of froghoppers is from resilin

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Summary

Introduction

Many insects jump by storing and releasing energy in elastic structures within their bodies. The fastest of the insect jumpers, the froghopper, uses a catapult-like elastic mechanism to achieve their jumping prowess in which energy, generated by the slow contraction of muscles, is released suddenly to power rapid and synchronous movements of the hind legs. Animals that use movements demanding both high speed and power have to overcome these limitations by slowly deforming elastic structures to maximise the energy stored, and deliver this stored energy by rapid recoil [2,3,4]. A trap-jaw ant powers its jaw strike by bending the cuticle of the head, the recoil of which delivers the strike in less than 1 ms [9]

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