Bioinspired remora adhesive disc offers insight into evolution
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
8-29-2019
Abstract
Remoras are a family of fishes that can attach to other swimming organisms via an adhesive disc evolved from dorsal fin elements. However, the factors driving the evolution of remora disc morphology are poorly understood. It is not possible to link selective pressure for attachment to a specific host surface because all known hosts evolved before remoras themselves. Fortunately, the fundamental physics of suction and friction are mechanically conserved. Therefore, a morphologically relevant bioinspired model can be used to examine performance of hypothetical evolutionary intermediates. Using a bioinspired remora disc, we experimentally investigated the performance of increased lamellar number on shear adhesion. Herein, we translated fundamental biological principles into engineering design rules and show that a passive model system can autonomously achieve adhesive forces measured in live remoras in any environment. Our experimental results show that an increase in lamellar number resulted in an increase in shear adhesive performance, supporting the phylogenetic trend observed in extant remoras. The greatest pull-off forces measured for our model were on surface roughness on the order of shark skin and exceeded those measured for live remoras attached to shark skin by almost 60%. Overall, relative to fossil remoras and their closest ancestor, extant remoras exhibit a morphology indicative of selection for enhanced shear adhesive performance.
Identifier
85071783226 (Scopus)
Publication Title
Bioinspiration and Biomimetics
External Full Text Location
https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-3190/ab3895
e-ISSN
17483190
ISSN
17483182
PubMed ID
31382254
Issue
5
Volume
14
Recommended Citation
Gamel, Kaelyn M.; Garner, Austin M.; and Flammang, Brooke E., "Bioinspired remora adhesive disc offers insight into evolution" (2019). Faculty Publications. 7385.
https://digitalcommons.njit.edu/fac_pubs/7385
