• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Watch Springtails Backflip More Than 60 Times Their Body Height Into The Air

August 31, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Move over, Simone Biles – there’s an insect with even better backflips. Globular springtails might only be a couple of millimeters long, but can jump and spin 60 times their own body height into the air, and new research looks even deeper at this incredible acrobatic feat.

Advertisement

Springtails (Dicyrtomina minuta) are pretty common little critters with over 8,000 species (the ones from this study were found in co-author Adrian Smith’s back garden). They have no defenses from predators besides leaping, so jumping out of the way is the only option. 

“When globular springtails jump, they don’t just leap up and down, they flip through the air – it’s the closest you can get to a Sonic the Hedgehog jump in real life,” said Smith, research assistant professor of biology at North Carolina State University and head of the evolutionary biology and behavior research lab at the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences, in a statement. “So naturally I wanted to see how they do it.”

This proved something of a challenge: the springtails are both tiny and very very fast. So fast, in fact, that watching with the naked eye or even a slow-motion camera just wasn’t going to cut it.

“Globular springtails jump so fast that you can’t see it in real time,” Smith says. “If you try to film the jump with a regular camera, the springtail will appear in one frame, then vanish. When you look at the picture closely, you can see faint vapor trail curlicues left behind where it flipped through the one frame.”



Advertisement

Instead, the team used cameras that shot at 40,000 frames per second – the camera on a normal phone shoots at 30. To encourage the springtails to jump in front of the cameras, the researchers either shone a light or gently tapped them with a paintbrush. 

The slow-mo revealed that the springtails don’t use their legs to jump – instead, they have a funky appendage called a furca that is hidden underneath their abdomen most of the time. When it’s time to flip into the air away from predators or researchers, the furca unfolds forked ends that are pushed against the ground, launching them away into their spinning backflips. They also discovered that the springtails pretty much always travel backwards or to the side, never forwards. 

“It only takes a globular springtail one thousandth of a second to backflip off the ground and they can reach a peak rate of 368 rotations per second,” Smith said. “They accelerate their bodies into a jump at about the same rate as a flea, but on top of that they spin. No other animal on earth does a backflip faster than a globular springtail.”



Advertisement

The landing, however, was something of a game of chance. The team discovered two styles of landing: the not-so-glamorous bouncing to a stop, or the use of a forked sticky tube called a collophore that the springtails can use to stop themselves and slow down immediately. They called these types of landing “anchored”, but the less controlled landings were just as common.  

“This is the first time anyone has done a complete description of the globular springtail’s jumping performance measures, and what they do is almost impossibly spectacular,” Smith said. “This is a great example of how we can find incredible, and largely undescribed, organisms living all around us.”

The paper is published in the journal Integrative Organismal Biology.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. U.S. Gulf Coast grain exports slowly resuming after Ida as more power restored
  2. Accenture expects strong Q1 as Delta variant delays return-to-work plans
  3. Google adds news ways to shop, like turning a website’s photos into shoppable products
  4. “Demon” Quasiparticle Finally Observed After Decades Of Predictions

Source Link: Watch Springtails Backflip More Than 60 Times Their Body Height Into The Air

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Man Broke Down Wall In His Basement And Discovered An Ancient Underground City That Once Housed 20,000 People
  • Same-Sex Penguin Couple Adopt And Raise Chick – And They’ve All Got 10/10 Names
  • Dolphins May Not “See” With Echolocation, But Instead “Feel” With It
  • Confirmed! Comet 3I/ATLAS Is Indeed An Interstellar Visitor, Quite Different From Its Predecessors
  • At 192, Jonathan – The Oldest Living Land Animal – Has Lived Through 40 US Presidents
  • 300,000-Year-Old Wooden Tools “Made By Denisovans” Discovered In China
  • Why Do Cats Eyes Glow? For The Same Reason Great White Sharks’ Do, Silly
  • G-astronomical News: Michelin-Starred Meal To Be Served On The ISS
  • In 2032, Earth May Witness A Once-In-5,000-Year Event On The Moon
  • Brand New Microscope Designed For Underwater Reveals Stunning Details Of Corals
  • The Atlantic’s Major Circulation Current Is Showing Worrying Signs, But Is Collapse Near?
  • “The Rings Held The Answer”: How We Finally Figured Out Saturn’s Day Length In 2019
  • Mystery Of Leonardo Da Vinci’s “Vitruvian Man” Solved By A Dentist And A Protractor
  • Asteroid Ryugu’s Latest Mineral Is As Weird As Finding “A Tropical Seed In The Arctic”
  • IFLScience The Big Questions: Are We Living Through A Sixth Mass Extinction?
  • Alien Abduction Or A Trick Of The Mind? A Down To Earth Explanation Of Close Encounters
  • Six Months Into Trump’s Presidency, Americans Report Record Low Pride In Being American
  • TikToker Unknowingly Handles Extremely Venomous Cone Snail And Lives To Tell The Tale
  • Scientists Sequence Oldest Egyptian DNA To Date, From A Whopping 4,800 Years Ago
  • “Uncharted Waters”: Large Hadron Collider Begins Colliding Oxygen For The First Time
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version