4.8 Article

Enhanced Flexibility of the Segmented Honey Bee Tongue with Hydrophobic Tongue Hairs

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 14, Issue 10, Pages 12911-12919

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.2c00431

Keywords

honey bee; insect mouthpart; fibrous surface; hydrophobic; flexibility; wettability; drag reduction

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51905556]
  2. Research Grant of Sun Yat-Sen University for Bairen Plan [76200-18841223]
  3. Grant for Popularization of Scientific and Technological Innovation of Guangdong Province [2020A1414040007]
  4. Pandeng Plan of Guangdong Province [pdjh2021b0017]
  5. Shenzhen Science and Technology Program [GXWD20201231165807008, 20200830220051001]

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Honey bee tongues have stiff and hydrophobic hairs which enhance their flexibility and adaptability to different environments. This finding could provide new insights for designing flexible fiber systems for transporting viscous liquids.
Fibrous surfaces in nature have already exhibited excellent functions that are normally ascribed to the synergistic effects of special structures and material properties. The honey bee tongue, foraging liquid food in nature, has a unique segmented surface covered with dense hairs. Since honey bees are capable of using their tongue to adapt to possibly the broadest range of feeding environments to exploit every possible source of liquids, the surface properties of the tongue, especially the covering hairs, would likely represent an evolutionary optimization. In this paper, we show that their tongue hairs are stiff and hydrophobic, the latter of which is highly unexpected as the structure is designed for liquid capturing. We found that such hydrophobicity can prevent those stiff hairs from being adhered to the soft tongue surface, which could significantly enhance the deformability of the tongue when honey bees feed at various surfaces and promote their adaptability to different environments. These findings bridge the relationship between surface wettability and structural characteristics, which may shed new light on designing flexible microstructured fiber systems to transport viscous liquids.

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