The weirdest (and coolest) tongues in the animal kingdom - Cella Wright

216,712 views ・ 2024-07-16

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:07
Could it be a succulent, pink, wiggling worm?
0
7003
3503
00:10
No, it was actually this alligator snapping turtle's
1
10673
3295
00:13
blood-engorged tongue appendage acting as a lure.
2
13968
3504
00:17
It's far from the only animal doing tongue trickery.
3
17597
3587
00:21
Fish attracted to prey-like ripples at the water's surface
4
21392
3462
00:24
might find themselves in the jaws of water snakes
5
24854
2961
00:27
who used their tongues to put those ripples there.
6
27815
3003
00:30
Snowy egrets do the same thing.
7
30902
2377
00:33
And puff adders lingually mimic insect movements to snag amphibians.
8
33279
4880
00:38
Tongues are getting all kinds of busy across the animal kingdom—
9
38367
4088
00:42
for many different reasons.
10
42455
2044
00:44
Some are used as murderous missiles in ambush attacks.
11
44665
3796
00:48
Within the chameleon's mouth,
12
48628
1543
00:50
a tongue muscle squeezes a series of concentric sheaths
13
50171
3378
00:53
around a cartilaginous rod, storing elastic energy.
14
53549
3963
00:57
As the muscle further contracts,
15
57595
1752
00:59
the tongue tissues slip over the tip of the rod,
16
59347
2878
01:02
releasing their stored energy and accelerating the tongue forward.
17
62225
4004
01:06
With a suction-cup-like-tip and saliva 400 times thicker—
18
66395
4255
01:10
and therefore much stickier— than our own,
19
70650
2502
01:13
the chameleon's tongue shoots out at almost 5 meters per second
20
73152
4254
01:17
and ensnares its target.
21
77406
1836
01:19
The rosette-nosed pygmy chameleon can shoot its tongue 2.5 times its body length
22
79325
5506
01:24
at speeds equivalent to a car going from 0 to 96 kilometers per hour
23
84831
5130
01:29
in a hundredth of a second.
24
89961
1710
01:31
It might take the cake when it comes to the animal kingdom's fastest tongue—
25
91838
4462
01:36
and the one that stretches the longest relative to body size.
26
96300
3087
01:39
Except the cake is obviously a bug.
27
99387
2836
01:42
A giant palm salamander's spring-loaded tongue, meanwhile,
28
102473
3754
01:46
packs its punch from two long muscles that stretch past its front legs.
29
106227
4755
01:51
Once contracted, they compress the arms of the cartilaginous skeleton
30
111190
4213
01:55
at the base of the salamander's tongue,
31
115403
2252
01:57
which then launches out with the rest of its tongue tissues.
32
117738
3546
02:01
From this elastic energy release,
33
121534
1960
02:03
the salamander achieves more instantaneous power per kilogram of muscle
34
123494
4296
02:07
than any vertebrate on record, affording it whip-quick captures.
35
127790
4296
02:12
Certain amphibians have their tongues routed to the front of their mouths.
36
132211
4588
02:16
With the drop of its lower jaw,
37
136924
1835
02:18
the northern leopard frog's tongue flips out.
38
138759
2962
02:21
And because frog tongues are super soft— up to 10 times softer than our own—
39
141721
5255
02:26
they stretch to cover a wide surface area.
40
146976
2794
02:29
They're also covered in glands that secrete sticky saliva
41
149770
3337
02:33
to maximize those areas of contact.
42
153107
2503
02:35
Then, because the leopard frog's tongue is positioned so far forward,
43
155693
4171
02:39
it can retract its eyes to help push the prey down its throat.
44
159864
4629
02:44
Blue-tongued skinks, meanwhile,
45
164702
2044
02:46
seem to display their extraordinary tongues defensively,
46
166746
3587
02:50
dazing predators and robbing their aerial attacks of momentum.
47
170333
4129
02:54
For other animals, it's all about lingual length.
48
174545
3337
02:57
When red-bellied woodpeckers' extended, barbed tongues
49
177882
3712
03:01
aren't probing for protein-rich comestibles,
50
181594
2794
03:04
they're wrapped around their skulls.
51
184388
2336
03:06
And giant anteaters evoke the question,
52
186724
2419
03:09
"why have teeth or a mouth you can open any considerable amount
53
189143
3754
03:12
when you could have a 60-centimeter-long tongue
54
192897
2377
03:15
clad in backward-facing spines and adhesive saliva
55
195274
3629
03:18
that catches up to 30,000 termites and ants a day?"
56
198903
2753
03:22
To which evolution answered, "you actually have a really good point."
57
202031
3837
03:26
Tube-lipped nectar bats' food sources are less animated.
58
206285
3545
03:29
But still, to reach bellflower nectar,
59
209914
2544
03:32
their tongues are 50% longer than their bodies—
60
212458
2753
03:35
the longest relative to body size among mammals.
61
215211
3378
03:38
Tongue textures also vary widely.
62
218756
2628
03:41
Tiny structures called papillae cover tongues,
63
221550
3295
03:44
facilitating touch and taste sensitivity and more.
64
224929
3837
03:49
Rainbow lorikeet papillae bloom into feathery projections that sop up nectar.
65
229058
5255
03:54
And penguins press their backward-facing, centimeter-long, spiny tongue
66
234480
4588
03:59
and palate papillae together to secure their slippery catch
67
239068
3962
04:03
and direct it into their gullet.
68
243030
1585
04:04
Meanwhile, sandpapery feline papillae are thought to retain saliva
69
244740
4838
04:09
during self-grooming,
70
249578
1502
04:11
helping cats cool, detangle, and distribute scents.
71
251080
3587
04:14
And, of course, some reptilian tongues reach a fork in their roads.
72
254792
5130
04:20
Snakes spread their tongue tips apart near the ground
73
260256
2753
04:23
and whip them up and down in the air,
74
263009
2043
04:25
sending odor molecules back into their vomeronasal organs.
75
265052
3921
04:29
Like having two ears, each tongue tip delivers a slightly different
76
269140
3920
04:33
odor sampling from the environment,
77
273060
2169
04:35
helping establish a more comprehensive stereo scent map.
78
275229
4004
04:39
This way, snakes can determine where an odor cue is strongest
79
279233
3879
04:43
and stay on the trails of prey and mates.
80
283112
3086
04:46
And that is just a taste of the fascinating things you'll find
81
286407
3837
04:50
when the animal kingdom opens wide and sticks its tongue out at you.
82
290244
4088
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7