Abstract
Mouthparts of fluid-feeding insects have unique material properties with no human-engineered analogue: the feeding devices acquire sticky and viscous liquids while remaining clean. We discovered that the external surface of the butterfly proboscis has a sharp boundary separating a hydrophilic drinking region and a hydrophobic non-drinking region. The structural arrangement of the proboscis provides the basis for the wetting dichotomy. Theoretical and experimental analyses show that fluid uptake is associated with enlargement of hydrophilic cuticular structures, the legulae, which link the two halves of the proboscis together. We also show that an elliptical proboscis produces a higher external meniscus than does a cylindrical proboscis of the same circumference. Fluid uptake is additionally facilitated in sap-feeding butterflies that have a proboscis with enlarged chemosensory structures forming a brush near the tip. This structural modification of the proboscis enables sap feeders to exploit films of liquid more efficiently. Structural changes along the proboscis, including increased legular width and presence of a brush-like tip, occur in a wide range of species, suggesting that awetting dichotomy is widespread in the Lepidoptera. © 2013 The Author(s) Published by the Royal Society. All rights reserved.
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Lehnert, M. S., Monaenkova, D., Andrukh, T., Beard, C. E., Adler, P. H., & Kornev, K. G. (2013). Hydrophobic-hydrophilic dichotomy of the butterfly proboscis. Journal of the Royal Society Interface, 10(85). https://doi.org/10.1098/rsif.2013.0336
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