Using Nail Art To Study Ladybug Wings

High speed cameras and uv-cured resin used in nail art have come together to help scientists understand what makes ladybug wings both strong and foldable.

AsianScientist (May 22, 2017) – Japanese scientists have figured out how ladybugs wings maintain their strength and rigidity during flight while becoming elastic for compact folding and storage on the ground. Their results, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, provide hints for the design of a wide range of deployable structures, from satellite antennas to microscopic medical instruments to articles for daily use like umbrellas and fans.

Ladybugs are highly mobile insects that can switch between walking and flying with ease and speed because they can quickly deploy and collapse their wings. Their wings consist of the hardened elytra, forewings with the familiar spots, and the soft-membrane hindwings used for flight, which are covered and protected by the elytra.

Previous studies have suggested that up-and-down movements in the abdomen and complex origami-like crease patterns on the wings play an important role in the folding process, but how the simple motion produces such an intricate folded shape remained a mystery. Ladybugs close their elytra before wing folding, preventing observation of the detailed process, and as the elytra are essential elements for folding, they also cannot be removed to reveal what lies underneath.

To study the folding mechanism and structure, a Japanese research group constructed a transparent artificial elytron from ultraviolet light-cured resin—often applied in nail art—using a silicon impression of an elytron they removed from a Coccinella septempunctata spotted ladybug, and transplanted it to replace the missing forewing.

The group, led by Assistant Professor Kazuya Saito of the University of Tokyo’s Institute of Industrial Science, then used high-speed cameras to observe the hindwing’s folding and unfolding movements. The scientists found that the ladybugs skillfully use the edge and lower surface of the elytron, whose curvature fits the characteristic curve shape of hindwing veins, to fold the wings along crease lines, together with abdominal lifting movements resulting in the rubbing and pulling of the hindwings into their dorsal storage space.

“I wasn’t sure if the ladybug could fold its wings with an artificial elytron made of nail-art resin,” said Saito. “So I was surprised when I found out it could.”

Moreover, the researchers used micro computerized tomography scanning to investigate the three-dimensional shapes of folded and unfolded wings, and bending points in the rigid area of the hindwings to understand the wing transformation mechanism giving rise to rigidity and strength necessary for flying, and elasticity facilitating folding.

They revealed that a curved shape in the veins, much like that of tape spring—the apparatus used for measuring also known as carpenter tape—helps support the wings. Similar tape spring-like structures—strong and firm when extended, but which can be arbitrarily bent and stored in compact form—are widely used in extension booms and hinges of space deployable structures like satellite antennas.

“The ladybugs’ technique for achieving complex folding is quite fascinating and novel, particularly for researchers in the fields of robotics, mechanics, aerospace and mechanical engineering,” said Saito.

Understanding how ladybugs can achieve the conflicting requirements of fortifying their hindwings with strength and stability for flight, while also making them pliable for folding and compact storage after landing has significant implications for engineering science.

The article can be found at: Saito et al. (2017) Investigation of Hindwing Folding in Ladybird Beetles by Artificial Elytron Transplantation and Microcomputed Tomography.

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Source: University of Tokyo; Photo: Kazuya Saito.
Disclaimer: This article does not necessarily reflect the views of AsianScientist or its staff.

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