Cutaneous water collection by a moisture-harvesting lizard, the thorny devil (Moloch horridus)

Author:

Comanns Philipp1ORCID,Withers Philip C.2,Esser Falk J.1,Baumgartner Werner3

Affiliation:

1. RWTH Aachen University, Institute of Biology II, Worringerweg 3, Aachen 52074, Germany

2. University of Western Australia, School of Animal Biology, 35 Stirling Highway, Crawley, Western Australia 6009, Australia

3. Johannes Kepler University Linz, Institute of Biomedical Mechatronics, Altenberger Strasse 69, Linz 4040, Austria

Abstract

ABSTRACT Moisture-harvesting lizards, such as the Australian thorny devil, Moloch horridus, have the remarkable ability to inhabit arid regions. Special skin structures, comprising a micro-structured surface with capillary channels in between imbricate overlapping scales, enable the lizard to collect water by capillarity and transport it to the mouth for ingestion. The ecological role of this mechanism is the acquisition of water from various possible sources such as rainfall, puddles, dew, condensation on the skin, or absorption from moist sand, and we evaluate here the potential of these various sources for water uptake by M. horridus. The water volume required to fill the skin capillary system is 3.19% of body mass. Thorny devils standing in water can fill their capillary system and then drink from this water, at approximately 0.7 µl per jaw movement. Thorny devils standing on nearly saturated moist sand could only fill the capillary channels to 59% of their capacity, and did not drink. However, placing moist sand on skin replicas showed that the capillary channels could be filled from moist sand when assisted by gravity, suggesting that their field behaviour of shovelling moist sand onto the dorsal skin might fill the capillary channels and enable drinking. Condensation facilitated by thermal disequilibrium between a cool thorny devil and warm moist air provided skin capillary filling to approximately 0.22% of body weight, which was insufficient for drinking. Our results suggest that rain and moist sand seem to be ecologically likely water sources for M. horridus on a regular basis.

Funder

RWTH Aachen University

Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung

European Commission

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Insect Science,Molecular Biology,Animal Science and Zoology,Aquatic Science,Physiology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference31 articles.

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