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201609Jan21:47

Tini­est chameleons deliver most pow­er­ful tongue-​lashings

Infor­ma­tion
pub­lished 09 Jan­u­ary 2016 | mod­i­fied 09 Jan­u­ary 2016
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A new study reports one of the most explo­sive move­ments in the ani­mal king­dom: the mighty tongue accel­er­a­tion of a chameleon just a cou­ple of inches long. The research illus­trates that to observe some of nature’s best per­for­mances, sci­en­tists some­times have to look at its lit­tlest species.

Chameleons are known for stick­ing their tongues out at the world fast and far, but until a new study by Brown Uni­ver­sity biol­o­gist Christo­pher Ander­son, the true extent of this awe­some capa­bil­ity had been largely over­looked. That’s because the small­est species hadn’t been measured.

Chameleon rhampholeon spinosusThe tiny Rham­p­holeon spin­osus chameleon can stick out its tongue with a peak accel­er­a­tion 264 times greater than the accel­er­a­tion due to grav­ity. Image credit: Christo­pher Anderson

What this study shows is that by using smaller species, we may be able to elu­ci­date these higher per­for­mance values
Christo­pher Ander­son, lead author, post­doc­toral research asso­ciate, Depart­ment of Ecol­ogy and Evo­lu­tion­ary Biol­ogy, Brown University »

Smaller species have higher per­for­mance than larger species,” said Ander­son. The study is pub­lished online on 4 Jan­u­ary in the jour­nal Sci­en­tific Reports. Ander­son reports that bal­lis­tic tongue pro­jec­tion in a chameleon that would fit on your thumb pro­duced a peak accel­er­a­tion 264 times greater than the accel­er­a­tion due to grav­ity. In auto­mo­tive terms, the tongue could go from 0 to 95 km per hour in a hun­dredth of a sec­ond, though it only needs about 20 mil­lisec­onds to snag a cricket.

Anderson’s review of the bio­me­chan­ics lit­er­a­ture sug­gests that the motion has the high­est accel­er­a­tion and power out­put pro­duced per kilo­gram of mus­cle mass by any rep­tile, bird, or mam­mal and is the sec­ond most pow­er­ful among any kind of ver­te­brate (only a sala­man­der out­does it). The total power out­put of the plucky Rham­p­holeon spin­osus chameleon’s tongue was 14,040 watts per kilogram.

The secret of chameleons is that they don’t just use spon­ta­neous mus­cle power to fling their tongues. They pre­load most of the motion’s total energy into elas­tic tis­sues in their tongue. The recoil of those tis­sues greatly aug­ments what mus­cle alone can do on the fly — to catch a fly.

Ander­son wanted to find the upper limit of chameleon tongue per­for­mance. To do that, he gath­ered indi­vid­u­als of 20 species of widely vary­ing sizes in his for­mer Uni­ver­sity of South Florida lab. Then he perched them one by one in front of a cam­era that shoots 3,000 frames a sec­ond. For each mea­sure­ment, a cricket hung off a small dan­gling mesh to tempt the tongue to emerge. When it did, he could mea­sure the dis­tance the tongue went, the elapsed time, and the speed and the accel­er­a­tion at any given time.

von Höhnel’s chameleon (Tri­o­ceros hoehnelii) was one of the 20 chameleon species in the study:


(Source: Brown Uni­ver­sity YouTube chan­nel; video by Christo­pher Anderson)

What Ander­son noticed across all his mea­sure­ments and analy­sis was that the smaller the chameleon, the higher the peak accel­er­a­tion, rel­a­tive power, and dis­tance of tongue exten­sion rel­a­tive to body size (Rham­p­holeon spin­osus stuck out its tongue to 2.5 times its body length). Larger chameleons pro­duced impres­sive motions, too, but not com­pared to their smaller cousins. For exam­ple, a roughly two-​foot-​long species, Fur­cifer oustaleti, man­aged a peak accel­er­a­tion less than 18 per­cent that of the tiny champ, Rhamp.

The results make phys­i­cal and evo­lu­tion­ary sense, Ander­son said. All of the chameleons have the same catapult-​like appa­ra­tus for launch­ing the tongue, but pro­por­tional to their size, smaller chameleons have a big­ger one than larger chameleons. They are like lit­tle sports cars with rel­a­tively pow­er­ful engines.

The evo­lu­tion­ary rea­son why tiny chameleons are pro­por­tion­ately bet­ter equipped for feed­ing is pre­sumed to be because, like all small ani­mals, they need to con­sume more energy per body weight to sur­vive. So lit­tle chameleons must be espe­cially good at catch­ing their insect meals — their tongues have to burst out unusu­ally fast and far to com­pete for all that needed nutrition.

For these rea­sons, Ander­son said, it will often ben­e­fit researchers to look at the lit­tle guys when study­ing phys­i­cal per­for­mance. Prior stud­ies of chameleon tongue accel­er­a­tion had mea­sured much lower peak val­ues because they only looked at much larger chameleons.


(Source: Brown Uni­ver­sity news release, 04.01.2016)


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