Insectile rocketryImagine that you’re a predator lunging for a tasty looking beetle, and just
Insectile rocketryImagine that you’re a predator lunging for a tasty looking beetle, and just as you get close to chomping it you receive a blast of hundred degree Celsius steam mixed with nasty chemicals accompanied by aloud blast…Instant death! It’s a common scenario, since some 500 species of bombardier beetle contain what effectively amounts to a biological rocket powered internal combustion engine inside them.In their abdomen they have a reaction chamber, where hydrogen peroxide and hydroquinone meet from their separate storage tanks. Here they react with water and enzymes (proteins that catalyse other reactions, ie speed up their rate), heat up close to water’s boiling point (which the insect somehow survives) and explode out of an aimable cannon at their rear ends. Fatal to other insects and small creatures, they are even quite painful to humans should you be so unlucky as to encounter one.Their chemical defence mechanism depends on feedback loops, when the muscle is contracted to open the valves of the storage tanks and the reaction starts, the resulting pressure closes the valves when it reaches the suitable level for firing before activating an outlet valve and firing out in some 70 pulses (to avoid harm to the beetle), all in a fraction of a second. Some have to present their backsides to the enemy, but others have highly accurate steerable barrels with a range of 270 degrees that also aim through the legs and are ableto regulate the spray. They are good for about 20 shots before needing to recharge, when the beetle has run out of ammo it generates new supplies of chemicals metabolically. A similar chemical propulsion system was used in the German V1 ‘doodlebug’ rockets during the second world war.One of them supposedly spat into Darwin’s mouth during his Beagle journey, his hands already full of other new and unique specimens and not enough jars around. All three beetles escaped. They are found on every continent barring Antarctica, usually in temperate wood and grass lands. Most are carnivorous night hunters, though they only use their guns in self defence. There are many variants on the chemistry across the family, but the basic principle is the same, rocket wielding insects. Ain’t nature wonderful?LozImage credit: National Academy of Scienceshttp://www.wired.com/2014/05/absurd-creature-of-the-week-bombardier-beetle/http://inhabitat.com/the-biomimicry-manual-what-can-the-bombardier-beetle-teach-us-about-fuel-injection/image-4/A video of one firing: https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=Pib9qT-pccI -- source link
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