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Extreme impact and cavitation forces of a biological hammer: strike forces of the peacock mantis shrimp Odontodactylus scyllarus S N Patek R L Caldwell
ABSTRACT: Mantis shrimp are renowned for their unusual method of breaking
shells with brief, powerful strikes of their raptorial appendages. Due to the
extreme speeds of these strikes underwater, cavitation occurs between their
appendages and hard-shelled prey. Here we examine the magnitude and relative
contribution of the impact and cavitation forces generated by the peacock
mantis shrimp Odontodactylus scyllarus. We present the surprising finding that
each strike generates two brief, high-amplitude force peaks, typically 390-480
mu s apart. Based on high-speed imaging, force measurements and acoustic
analyses, it is evident that the first force peak is caused by the limb's
impact and the second force peak is due to the collapse of cavitation bubbles.
Peak limb impact forces range from 400 to 1501 N and peak cavitation forces
reach 504 N. Despite their small size, O. scyllarus can generate impact forces
thousands of times their body weight. Furthermore, on average, cavitation peak
forces are 50% of the limb's impact force, although cavitation forces may
exceed the limb impact forces by up to 280%. The rapid succession of high peak
forces used by mantis shrimp suggests that mantis shrimp use a potent
combination of cavitation forces and extraordinarily high impact forces to
fracture shells. The stomatopod's hammer is fundamentally different from
typical shell-crushing mechanisms such as fish jaws and lobster claws, and may
have played an important and as yet unexamined role in the evolution of shell
form.
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