Articles
Insect
Designed with a Spring in Its Step
by
Brian Thomas
Scientists
are discovering engineering details of the biological structures
that enable some animals to jump exceedingly far for their sizes.
Froghoppers are insects that can jump 100 times their body length,
and it turns out that sheer muscular strength is not nearly sufficient
to account for this feat.
Research shows that the froghopper has three anatomical features
that are the correct size, shape and strength to enable its leaping
prowess: a stiff arch made of the same material as the insect’s
exoskeleton (chitin), a flexible protein connective layer (resilin),
and a powerful, attached muscle. When the insect jumps, “the
energy storage is primarily in the chitinous…arches, with
the resilin adding other essential properties to these composite
structures.”1 The muscle bends this arch, which is connected
to the insect’s hind legs, until it is at the appropriate
tension. Then “mechanical ‘latches’ on the coxa
and femur release,” springing the insect with a force of up
to 414 times its own body weight.2
Another remarkable engineering detail is that “the pleural
arches may work like a composite bow used in archery.”1 The
combination of the two materials, chitin and resilin, in the arch
enables it to resist wear, keep its shape after many uses, and remain
tensed for long periods.
According to standard evolutionary reasoning, all of life’s
features—which include this finely tuned spring and release
machine—were invented by unaided nature, “in spite of
the patent absurdity of some of its constructs,…[and] in spite
of the tolerance of the scientific community for unsubstantiated
just-so stories.”3
In the engineering world, however, interdependent features are hallmarks
of purposeful design, not happenstance. Only in precise combination
do the resilin and chitin materials, properly attached to muscle,
skeleton, nervous system, and legs, enable the froghopper to be
the world record jumper. It must take a great leap of faith in the
unobserved powers of nature to ascribe the origin of this kind of
precise mechanism to anything other than an adequate cause—and
the Creator God of the Bible is more than adequate.
References
1. Burrows, M. et al., 2008. Resilin and cuticle form a composite
structure for energy storage in jumping by froghopper insects. BMC
Biology. 6: 41.
2. Amos, J. 2003. Garden insect is jump champion. BBC News. Posted
on news.bbc.co.uk July 30, 2008, accessed September 30, 2008.
3. Lewontin, R. 1997. Billions and Billions of Demons. The New York
Review of Books. 44 (1): 31, a review of The Demon-Haunted World:
Science as a Candle in the Dark by Carl Sagan. The sentence that
is quoted begins, “We take the side of science...,”
but the presumption that “science” must exclude the
possibility of design by creation is entirely belief-based and counter-scientific.
Rather, the science shows—in this case, by observation and
inference—that interdependent structures like this must have
been purposefully manufactured.
http://www.icr.org/article/4148/
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