Onychophora - Slime

Slime

The slime of the Onychophora is forcefully squirted from a pair of slime glands (oral papillae) in defence against predators and to capture prey. The slime glands, positioned on the sides of the head below the antennae, are a pair of highly modified limbs and typically propel the slime around a centimetre. The slime can be propelled up to four centimetres, although accuracy drops with range, which is usually much shorter than this. One squirt usually suffices to snare a prey item, although larger prey may be further immobilised by smaller squirts targeted at the limbs; additionally, the fangs of spiders are sometimes targeted.

The slime, which can account for up to 11% of the organism's dry weight, is 90% water; its dry residue consists mainly of proteins—primarily a collagen-type protein. 1.3% of the slime's dry weight consists of sugars, mainly glactosamine. The slime also contains lipids and the surfactant nonylphenol. Onychophora are the only organisms known to produce this latter substance.

The proteinaceous composition accounts for the slime's high tensile strength and stretchiness. Upon ejection, it forms a net of threads about 20 µm in diameter, with evenly spaced droplets of viscous adhesive fluid along their length. It subsequently dries, shrinking, losing its stickiness, and becoming brittle. Onychophora will eat and "reuse" any dried slime.

The lipid and nonylphenol constituents may serve one of two purposes. They may line the ejection channel, stopping the slime from sticking to the organism when it is secreted; or they may slow the drying process long enough for the slime to reach its target.

It takes an onychophoran around 24 days to replenish an exhausted slime repository.

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