ScienceHere’s how polar bears might get traction on snow

Here’s how polar bears might get traction on snow


Tiny “fingers” can help polar bears get a grip.

Like the rubbery nubs on the bottom of baby socks, microstructures on the bears’ paw pads offer some extra friction, scientists report November 1 in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface. The pad protrusions may keep polar bears from slipping on snow, says Ali Dhinojwala, a polymer scientist at the University of Akron in Ohio who has also studied the sticking power of gecko feet (SN: 8/9/05).

Nathaniel Orndorf, a materials scientist at Akron who focuses on ice, adhesion and friction, was interested in the work Dhinojwala’s lab did on geckos, but “we can’t really put geckos on the ice,” he says. So he turned to polar bears.

Orndorf teamed up with Dhinojwala and Austin Garner, an animal biologist now at Syracuse University in New York, and compared the paws of polar bears, brown bears, American black bears and a sun bear. All but the sun bear had paw pad bumps. But the polar bears’ bumps looked a little different. For a given diameter, their bumps tend to be taller, the team found. That extra height translates to more traction on lab-made snow, experiments with 3-D printed models of the bumps suggest.

Until now, scientists didn’t know that bump shape could make the difference between gripping and slipping, Dhinojwala says.

microscope image showing the rough bumps on polar bear paws
Rough bumps on the pads of polar bears’ paws (pictured) offer the animals extra traction on snow.N. Orndorf et al/Journal of the Royal Society Interface 2022

Polar bear paw pads are also ringed with fur and are smaller than those of other bears, the team reports, adaptations that might let the Arctic animals conserve body heat as they trod upon ice. Smaller pads generally mean less real estate for grabbing the ground. So extra-grippy pads could help polar bears make the most of what they’ve got, Orndorf says.

Along with bumpy pads, the team hopes to study polar bears’ fuzzy paws and short claws, which might also give the animals a nonslip grip.



Original Source Link

Latest News

AI can tell if CEOs are depressed based on how their voices sound during earnings calls

© 2024 Fortune Media IP Limited. All Rights Reserved. Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our Terms...

Mad Lads Solana NFTs jump to 6th place amid TRUMP memecoin buzz

Mad Lads climbs to sixth place among top NFTs, with a market cap of $186.7 million, as Solana...

Has business activity picked up in Europe?

Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly...

Apple says it’s following the law by removing TikTok from the App Store

Apple is obligated to follow the laws in the jurisdictions where it operates. Pursuant to the Protecting Americans...

The Free Press Crumbles As CBS Considers Bribing Trump With Lawsuit Payoff

Months ago, Donald Trump filed a frivolous lawsuit against CBS where he claimed that 60 Minutes edited their...

Must Read

The House In Chaos As Nancy Mace Challenges Jasmine Crockett To A Fight

To support PoliticusUSA and our new ad-free platform,...

Biden warns nation about the rise of American tech oligarchs

President Biden used his final public address from...
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you