setal structure
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Author(s):  
Anthony P. Russell ◽  
Austin M. Garner

Recent years have witnessed a multitude of studies focusing on gekkotan adhesion. Intense interest in this phenomenon was triggered by the discovery of the manner and magnitude of the forces generated by the hair-like filaments (setae) on the toe pads and inspired the development of the next generation of smart, reversible synthetic adhesives. Most studies pursuing these goals have concentrated on the generalized form and properties of gekkotan setae outlined in those key early studies, resulting in the fabrication of synthetic filaments of uniform dimensions. Although there are over 1,800 species of extant geckos, and hundreds of species of anoles (a separate lizard lineage that has convergently evolved adhesive toe pads), most investigations have used relatively few species as the source of basic information, the Tokay gecko (Gekko gecko) being the most prominent among these. Such exemplar taxa generally exhibit structurally intricate setae and morphologically complex configurations of the adhesive apparatus. Setal structure taken to be characteristic of these taxa is generally reported by singular statements of maximal length, diameter, density and branching pattern. Contemporaneous work focusing on the configuration of setae at locations across the toe pads and upon the evolutionary origin of adhesively competent digits in anoles and specific lineages of geckos, however, has revealed extensive variation of setal structure within individuals, information about how setae may have arisen from non-adhesive filamentous precursors, and how newly adhesively competent digits have been integrated into pre-existing patterns of locomotor mechanics and kinematics. Such observations provide insights into what is minimally necessary for adhesively competent digits to function and reveal the simplest configuration of components that make this possible. We contend that information gleaned from such studies will assist those seeking to employ the principles of fibrillar-based adhesion, as exemplified by lizards, for bio-inspired applications.



Author(s):  
Bhavani E. Narayanaswamy ◽  
James A. Blake

During the 2002 Antarctic Deep-sea Biodiversity (ANDEEP) programme to the Drake Passage, Weddell Sea Basin and South Sandwich Slope and trench, a new deep-water species of orbiniid polychaete was collected: Orbiniella andeepia sp. nov. Orbiniella andeepia appears to be most closely related to O. marionensis but differs in capillary setal structure, the type and number of acicular spines found in each podial lobe. Orbiniella andeepia is only the third deep-water species of Orbiniella to be discovered. It exhibits both a wide depth- and geographic-range within the Antarctic slope and abyssal sediments.



1998 ◽  
Vol 79 (3) ◽  
pp. 149-161 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Hausen ◽  
T. Bartolomaeus
Keyword(s):  


1979 ◽  
Vol 8 (1-4) ◽  
pp. 119-138 ◽  
Author(s):  
PHYLLIS KNIGHT-JONES ◽  
MICHAEL R. FORDY


1939 ◽  
Vol 71 (5) ◽  
pp. 109-112 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. McDunnough

In a recent note (1938, Canadian Entomologist, LXX, 128) I suggested that this name should be applied in a strict sense to the species the larva of which feeds on Aster and Grindelia, but hesitated to separate the Balsamorrhiza feeder as a distinct species owing to lack of material; I had, however, called attention (1936, Canadian Entomologist, LXVIII, 63) to certain differences in the setal structure of the pupal cases which warranted further investigation.



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