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      Natural barriers: waterfall transit by small flying animals

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          Abstract

          Waterfalls are conspicuous geomorphological features with heterogeneous structure, complex dynamics and multiphase flows. Swifts, dippers and starlings are well-known to nest behind waterfalls, and have been reported to fly through them. For smaller fliers, by contrast, waterfalls seem to represent impenetrable barriers, but associated physical constraints and the kinematic responses of volant animals during transit are unknown. Here, we describe the flight behaviour of hummingbirds (the sister group to the swifts) and of various insect taxa as they fly through an artificial sheet waterfall. We additionally launched plastic balls at different speeds at the waterfall so as to assess the inertial dependence of sheet penetration. Hummingbirds were able to penetrate the waterfall with reductions in both their translational speed, and stroke amplitude. The body tilted more vertically and exhibited greater rotations in roll, pitch and yaw, along with increases in tail spread and pitch. The much smaller plastic balls and some flies moving at speeds greater than 2.3 m s −1 and 1.6 m s −1, respectively, also overcame effects of surface tension and water momentum and passed through the waterfall; objects with lower momentum, by contrast, entered the sheet but then fell along with the moving water. Waterfalls can thus represent impenetrable physical barriers for small and slow animal fliers, and may also serve to exclude both predators and parasites from nests of some avian taxa.

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          Most cited references17

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          Physics of liquid jets

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            BIOMECHANICS. Jumping on water: Surface tension-dominated jumping of water striders and robotic insects.

            Jumping on water is a unique locomotion mode found in semi-aquatic arthropods, such as water striders. To reproduce this feat in a surface tension-dominant jumping robot, we elucidated the hydrodynamics involved and applied them to develop a bio-inspired impulsive mechanism that maximizes momentum transfer to water. We found that water striders rotate the curved tips of their legs inward at a relatively low descending velocity with a force just below that required to break the water surface (144 millinewtons/meter). We built a 68-milligram at-scale jumping robotic insect and verified that it jumps on water with maximum momentum transfer. The results suggest an understanding of the hydrodynamic phenomena used by semi-aquatic arthropods during water jumping and prescribe a method for reproducing these capabilities in artificial systems.
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              Mosquitoes survive raindrop collisions by virtue of their low mass.

              In the study of insect flight, adaptations to complex flight conditions such as wind and rain are poorly understood. Mosquitoes thrive in areas of high humidity and rainfall, in which raindrops can weigh more than 50 times a mosquito. In this combined experimental and theoretical study, we here show that free-flying mosquitoes can survive the high-speed impact of falling raindrops. High-speed videography of those impacts reveals a mechanism for survival: A mosquito's strong exoskeleton and low mass renders it impervious to falling drops. The mosquito's low mass causes raindrops to lose little momentum upon impact and so impart correspondingly low forces to the mosquitoes. Our findings demonstrate that small fliers are robust to in-flight perturbations.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                R Soc Open Sci
                R Soc Open Sci
                RSOS
                royopensci
                Royal Society Open Science
                The Royal Society
                2054-5703
                August 2020
                19 August 2020
                19 August 2020
                : 7
                : 8
                : 201185
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Integrative Biology, University of California , Berkeley, CA 94720 USA
                [2 ]Palaeontological Institute and Museum, University of Zurich , Switzerland
                [3 ]University of California, San Francisco School of Medicine , San Francisco, CA 94143 USA
                [4 ]Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute , Balboa, Republic of Panama
                Author notes
                Author for correspondence: Victor M. Ortega-Jimenez e-mail: ornithopterus@ 123456gmail.com

                Electronic supplementary material is available online at https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.5082868.

                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0024-5086
                http://orcid.org/0000-0003-3640-9695
                Article
                rsos201185
                10.1098/rsos.201185
                7481727
                a99b7327-25b0-464f-b15c-1e31f0019c5a
                © 2020 The Authors.

                Published by the Royal Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/, which permits unrestricted use, provided the original author and source are credited.

                History
                : 3 July 2020
                : 21 July 2020
                Categories
                1001
                25
                1009
                73
                Ecology, Conservation, and Global Change Biology
                Research Article
                Custom metadata
                August, 2020

                two-phase flows,flight,hummingbirds,insect,swifts
                two-phase flows, flight, hummingbirds, insect, swifts

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