These insects can catapult their pee away

Publicly released:
International
CC:0
CC:0

Sharpshooter insects have a unique ability to fire off droplets of their pee using a little catapult built into their butts and a fancy phenomenon called superpropulsion, say US researchers. The little critters clear out up to 300 times their own body weight of wee per day (in comparison to the weak attempt that we humans make at 2.5% of our bodyweight), they say. Superpropulsion is possible by an oscillating surface being able to accelerate, in this instance, a drop of liquid faster than the speed of the surface, and the insects use this to fire their excessive wee production away in a little catapult-like motion, the authors add.

Media release

From: Springer Nature

Sharpshooter insects use droplet superpropulsion to eliminate high volumes of their waste, up to 300 times their own body weight per day, a Nature Communications paper reports. This mechanism allows sharpshooters to catapult droplets, forming ‘leafhopper rain’ as a strategy to conserve energy, the findings suggest.

Millimeter-scale sharpshooter insects have a diet that is 95% water and poor in nutritional components. They eliminate up to 300 times their body weight per day, compared to about 2.5% of body weight per day in humans. To survive on this diet, these insects use large muscles and an efficient digestive system to extract and filter large volumes of plant fluid.
 
Saad Bhamla and colleagues found that sharpshooter insects form pee droplets through superpropulsion as a strategy to conserve energy compared to other mechanisms of waste disposal, such as producing a jet stream, as seen in Cicadidae. Superpropulsion is a phenomenon where an oscillating surface can propel a drop of liquid upward at a speed higher than that of the oscillating surface. In a series of experiments the authors demonstrate that these insects temporally tune the frequency of their anal stylus to the frequency of their pee droplets as a single-shot mechanism.

The findings may inform insect-inspired engineering designs of energy-efficient self-cleaning structures and soft robotic engines, the authors suggest.

Multimedia

Video 1
Video 2
Video 3
Journal/
conference:
Nature Communications
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, USA
Funder: NIH MIRA Grant R35GM142588 (M.S.B.); NSF Grant MCB-1817334 (M.S.B.); NSF CAREER IOS-1941933 (M.S.B.); the Open Philanthropy Project (M.S.B.).
Media Contact/s
Contact details are only visible to registered journalists.