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misceláneo Pregunta

I woke up and I had this pregunta on my mind...

Do tu think that when an insect walks on a muro o on the ceiling, it has to make más efforts because of gravity?

I really have no idea why this pregunta came up to my mind but whatever...
 Mrs-X posted hace más de un año
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misceláneo Respuestas

azkaban said:
When climbing on rough surfaces, such as a muro o ceiling, they use tiny little claws. If tu could see the surface of your walls and ceilings through a microscope, you'd see there are plenty of places for tiny things to put their hooks and climb away.

Ants can generate más than enough force to keep their tiny, air-filled bodies from falling, generally speaking. Sometimes they do fall, though; tu just need to watch them often enough, and on the right kind of surface. Most insects have two sets of climbing tools on their feet, one for smooth surfaces and one for rough surfaces.

Some insects have the additional capacity of being able to secrete a thin film of oil on the pads, which gives them even greater sticking power, and also has surface tension effects. Just try taking a square millimeter of thin plastic with a micro-drop of maíz oil on it, and see if it won't stick to your ceiling o any other surface.
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posted hace más de un año 
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dude that's awesome are tu some kind of ant expert? lol thanks
Mrs-X posted hace más de un año
xxXsk8trXxx said:
I misread that as "when an incest walks on the ceiling" at first XD
I don't know much about that, but I think it's a part of their instinct to climb on walls. They climb on trees, too. Climbing on trees and walls must be pretty similar.
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posted hace más de un año 
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hahahaha I just read my pregunta again and I misread just like tu did xD
Mrs-X posted hace más de un año
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