Toad Tongues Slay With Seriously Sticky Spit

Toad tongues are ready for their closeup — extremely close closeups — in this video from San Francisco PBS station KQED. The closeups and slow-motion photography are necessary to show the role toad saliva plays in snatching crickets, worms, and other prey in the blink of an eye. Thanks to research from the team of David Hu, professor in the School of Biological Sciences with an adjunct appointment in the School of Physics, science learned that a toad’s saliva starts off thick and sticky. But when the saliva hits prey at a high speed, it thins out dramatically, pouring into every nook and cranny the tongue touches. And then, it becomes sticky again, drawing that meal down the hatch.

created: 
1680530733
Author: 
Renay San Miguel
hgId: 
667017
gmt_created: 
2023-04-03 14:05:33
Publication: 
KQED
Article URL drupal link: 
Article URL: 
https://www.kqed.org/science/1981963/toad-tongues-slay-with-seriously-sticky-spit
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1680530733
gmt_changed: 
2023-04-03 14:05:33