Locusts spun in a centrifuge develop extra-strong exoskeletons
Last edited Thu Dec 7, 2023, 06:11 AM - Edit history (1)
https://www.newscientist.com/article/2406661-locusts-spun-in-a-centrifuge-develop-extra-strong-exoskeletons/
Locusts spun in a centrifuge develop extra-strong exoskeletons
Spinning locusts in a centrifuge to mimic hypergravity seems to cause their exoskeletons to adapt, giving them stiffer legs but too much gravity and they simply died
By Leah Crane
6 December 2023
Locust with a backpack that helped apply mechanical stress to the exoskeleton
Jan-Henning Dirks
When the gravity acting on them is increased, locusts adapt. Locusts placed in a centrifuge to mimic the conditions of hypergravity grew tougher legs than those living normally but not all of them survived the process.
Many biological materials, such as bone and wood, can adapt and become stronger under physical strain, but it isnt clear whether animals with shell-like exoskeletons can adapt in the same way as those with internal skeletons. Karen Stamm and Jan-Henning Dirks at the City University of Applied Sciences in Bremen, Germany, studied this by placing locusts inside a specially designed centrifuge to stress-test their exoskeletons using simulated hypergravity.
The locusts were assigned to one of four gravity conditions: 1g which is typical gravity at sea level and didnt involve a centrifuge and 3g, 5g or 8g conditions, all of which did involve centrifuging the insects. After two weeks, the researchers removed the locusts hind legs and tested how much force was required to bend them.
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