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Silver coat lets Saharan ants withstand scorching desert heat

Unique triangular hairs help keep Saharan silver ants cool at 70掳C by manipulating the physics of light

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Silver coat lets Saharan ants withstand scorching desert heat

Full metal jacket (Image: Norman Nan Shi and Nanfang Yu, Columbia Engineering)

IT鈥橲 fashion front line, not fashion faux pas. During the hottest part of the day, when sand temperatures reach 70 掳C, the hairy back of the Saharan silver ant repels the sun鈥檚 rays and sheds excess heat.

from Columbia University in New York was intrigued by how each ant looked like 鈥渁 droplet of mercury鈥, so took a closer look.

Yu鈥檚 team found that the ants鈥 silvery appearance comes from a dense array of Toblerone-shaped hairs, which reflect visible and near-infrared light. The hairs are about the same thickness as the wavelength of the sun鈥檚 warming rays, so the rays bounce off their triangular walls.

The hairs are much thinner than the wavelengths of mid-infrared light so they allow those wavelengths of light to radiate away from the ants 鈥 effectively cooling them down. Ants with hair had body temperatures between 5 and 10 掳C lower than those that had been shaved (Science, ).

Their silvery coats allow the ants to scavenge the corpses of less-fortunate insects and arthropods under the midday sun.

Topics: Adaptation / Biology / Evolution

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