4.5 Article

Scaling of caterpillar body properties and its biomechanical implications for the use of a hydrostatic skeleton

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 214, Issue 7, Pages 1194-1204

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.051029

Keywords

Manduca sexta caterpillar; hydrostatic skeleton; biomechanics of scaling; larval ontogeny; finite element analysis; crawling; inching

Categories

Funding

  1. NSF [IOS 0718537, IOS 0909953]
  2. Direct For Biological Sciences
  3. Division Of Integrative Organismal Systems [0909953] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Caterpillars can increase their body mass 10,000-fold in 2. weeks. It is therefore remarkable that most caterpillars appear to maintain the same locomotion kinematics throughout their entire larval stage. This study examined how the body properties of a caterpillar might change to accommodate such dramatic changes in body load. Using Manduca sexta as a model system, we measured changes in body volume, tissue density and baseline body pressure, and the dimensions of load-bearing tissues ( the cuticle and muscles) over a body mass range from milligrams to several grams. All Manduca biometrics relevant to the hydrostatic skeleton scaled allometrically but close to the isometric predictions. Body density and pressure were almost constant. We next investigated the effects of scaling on the bending stiffness of the caterpillar hydrostatic skeleton. The anisotropic non-linear mechanical response of Manduca muscles and soft cuticle has previously been quantified and modeled with constitutive equations. Using biometric data and these material laws, we constructed finite element models to simulate a hydrostatic skeleton under different conditions. The results show that increasing the internal pressure leads to a non-linear increase in bending stiffness. Increasing the body size results in a decrease in the normalized bending stiffness. Muscle activation can double this stiffness in the physiological pressure range, but thickening the cuticle or increasing the muscle area reduces the structural stiffness. These non-linear effects may dictate the effectiveness of a hydrostatic skeleton at different sizes. Given the shared anatomy and size variation in Lepidoptera larvae, these mechanical scaling constraints may implicate the diverse locomotion strategies in different species.

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