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Tails stabilize landing of gliding geckos crashing head-first into tree trunks

Biology

Tails stabilize landing of gliding geckos crashing head-first into tree trunks

R. Siddall, G. Byrnes, et al.

Explore how the gliding gecko (*Hemidactylus platyurus*) achieves remarkable landings! This study reveals the crucial role of the gecko's tail in stabilizing landings through innovative high-speed video analysis and dynamic modeling, conducted by Robert Siddall, Greg Byrnes, Robert J. Full, and Ardian Jusufi.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Animals use diverse solutions to land on vertical surfaces. Here we show the unique landing of the gliding gecko, Hemidactylus platyurus. Our high-speed video footage in the Southeast Asian rainforest capturing the first recorded, subcritical, short-range glides revealed that geckos did not markedly decrease velocity prior to impact. Unlike specialized gliders, geckos crashed head-first with the tree trunk at 6.0 ± 0.9 m/s (~140 body lengths per second) followed by an enormous pitchback of their head and torso 103 ± 34° away from the tree trunk anchored by only their hind limbs and tail. A dynamic mathematical model pointed to the utility of tails for the fall arresting response (FAR) upon landing. We tested predictions by measuring foot forces during landing of a soft, robotic physical model with an active tail reflex triggered by forefoot contact. As in wild animals, greater landing success was found for tailed robots. Experiments showed that longer tails with an active tail reflex resulted in the lower adhesive foot forces necessary for stabilizing successful landings, with a tail shortened to 25% requiring over twice the adhesive foot force.
Publisher
Communications Biology
Published On
Sep 02, 2021
Authors
Robert Siddall, Greg Byrnes, Robert J. Full, Ardian Jusufi
Tags
gliding gecko
landing mechanism
tail stabilization
fall-arresting response
high-speed video
dynamic modeling
robotic experiments
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