Shrimp molting by Prof Hortense Le Ferrand

Hiding, weak and soft,
Mantis Shrimp matures and grows,
Preparing attack.

by Prof Hortense Le Ferrand

The Mantis Shrimp is an extraordinary animal in many ways. One of its striking features is its dactyl club: this is a biomaterial that is so hard and tough that it uses it to dismantle crabs and break seashells. But the Mantis Shrimp also grows by molting: during this process, it discards its club, and builds a new one.

In the paper by Amini et al (2019), the club of the Mantis was dissected during its maturation, from day zero to one month. It was observed that a thin membrane, initially folded into a cavity at the centre of the “old” club got inflated, before slowly being converted into the hard deadly appendage. The Mantis remained hidden in its nest until the biomineralization completed and the extraordinary mechanical properties of the club got recovered.

Original research: https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1816835116

Dr Hortense Le Ferrand is an Assistant Professor at Nanyang Technical University, Singapore. Hortense’s interests are on the fabrication and design of novel materials and systems inspired by nature. Check out her earlier sciku ‘Closing the Trap’ here.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.