Sunday, May 19, 2013

Thanks to its incredible camouflage, you could easily pass a Gaboon viper without even knowing it was there. Its cream and brown scales allow it to blend in seamlessly with dead leaves while its black scales resemble gaps on the forest floor. Like real gaps, no light appears to hit the black scales and they seem to possess a depth the rest of the snake's scales don't. But how do Gaboon vipers pull off this illusion?

New research shows this trick is possible thanks to nanostructures. Using a scanning electron microscope, German researchers were able to take the closest look yet at the viper's scales. Black scales possessed more pronounced microstructures than paler scales, and these microstructures had more intricate ridges than structures in lighter areas.

When light hits the black scales it gets reflected and dispersed around these miniscule ridges and structures, and as it bounces around more and more is absorbed by the black pigment. Of the light that hits these black scales, less than 11% is reflected away from the snake's body.

This is the first time a snake has been observed with this microstructure camouflage, but it's not the first animal we know to use it. Butterflies such as the Ulysses butterfly use the same method in the black areas of their wings. In future, the team want to discover more about how these nanostructures work, and their findings could help engineers design durable "ultra-black" materials.

To read the paper: http://bit.ly/19Qt2V0

Photo: West African Gaboon viper (left, credit to Tim Vickers) and the nanostructures on its black scales (right, credit to Spinner et al, 2013).

http://phenomena.nationalgeographic.com/2013/05/16/the-gaboon-viper-has-ultra-black-scales-so-you-cant-see-it/

http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2013/05/nanostructures-viper-skin-ultra-black/
Thanks to its incredible camouflage, you could easily pass a Gaboon viper without even knowing it was there. Its cream and brown scales allow it to blend in seamlessly with dead leaves while its black scales resemble gaps on the forest floor. Like real gaps, no light appears to hit the black scales and they seem to possess a depth the rest of the snake's scales don't. But how do Gaboon vipers pull off this illusion?

New research shows this trick is possible thanks to nanostructures. Using a scanning electron microscope, German researchers were able to take the closest look yet at the viper's scales. Black scales possessed more pronounced microstructures than paler scales, and these microstructures had more intricate ridges than structures in lighter areas. 

When light hits the black scales it gets reflected and dispersed around these miniscule ridges and structures, and as it bounces around more and more is absorbed by the black pigment. Of the light that hits these black scales, less than 11% is reflected away from the snake's body. 

This is the first time a snake has been observed with this microstructure camouflage, but it's not the first animal we know to use it. Butterflies such as the Ulysses butterfly use the same method in the black areas of their wings. In future, the team want to discover more about how these nanostructures work, and their findings could help engineers design durable "ultra-black" materials.

To read the paper: http://bit.ly/19Qt2V0

Photo: West African Gaboon viper (left, credit to Tim Vickers) and the nanostructures on its black scales (right, credit to Spinner et al, 2013).

http://phenomena.nationalgeographic.com/2013/05/16/the-gaboon-viper-has-ultra-black-scales-so-you-cant-see-it/

http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2013/05/nanostructures-viper-skin-ultra-black/

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