How do wombats make cubed poo?

71st Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Fluid Dynamics

Volume 63, Number 13

Sunday–Tuesday, November 18–20, 2018; Atlanta, Georgia

Session E19: Biological fluid dynamics: General I

5:10 PM–6:28 PM, Sunday, November 18, 2018
Georgia World Congress Center Room: B306

Chair: David Saintillan, University of California, San Diego

Abstract ID: BAPS.2018.DFD.E19.1

Abstract: E19.00001 : How do wombats make cubed poo? 

5:10 PM–5:23 PM

  Abstract  

Presenter:

Patricia J Yang
(Georgia Inst of Tech)

Authors:

Patricia J Yang
(Georgia Inst of Tech)

Miles Chan
(Georgia Inst of Tech)

Scott Carver
(University of Tasmania, Australia)

David L Hu
(Georgia Inst of Tech)

Wombats are fossorial herbivorous Australian marsupials with the distinctive feature of producing cubic feces, which is unique in the animal kingdom. In the built world, cubic structures are created by extrusion or injection molding, but there are few examples of this feat in nature. We investigate how wombats produce cubic feces, through investigation of the structure and mechanics of two dissected alimentary systems of wombats--derived from veterinary euthanized individuals following motor vehicle collisions in Tasmania, Australia. In the final 8 percent of the intestine, feces changed from a liquid-like state into a solid state composed of separated cubes of length 2 cm. This shape change was due to the azimuthally varying elastic properties of the intestinal wall. By emptying the intestine and inflating it with a long balloon, we found that the local strain varies from 20 percent at the cube's corners to 75 percent at its edges. Thus, the intestine stretches preferentially at the walls to facilitate cube formation. This study addresses the long-standing mystery of cubic scat formation and provides insight into new manufacturing techniques for non-axisymmetric structures using soft tissues.

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