Chameleons do not coil their tongues around prey; they rely on an adhesive mechanism. At the tongue’s tip lies mucus approximately 400 times more viscous than human saliva, comparable in thickness to honey, enabling the animal to secure insects weighing up to a third of its own body mass. To investigate this adhesive property, researchers coated a glass plate with chameleon mucus, tilted it, and rolled a small steel ball across the surface at varying speeds. They found that the faster the ball moved, the more rapidly it decelerated, indicating that the mucus’s adhesive strength increases with velocity. This velocity dependent stickiness explains why chameleons extend and retract their tongues at extraordinary speed, ensuring effective prey capture.
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So is it an ingredient for oobleck? I don’t rlly know how to spell the substance.
PLEASE IM EATING RIGHT NOW DONT TALK ABOUT SPIT AND SALIVA😭😭
I could do it easy give me four hours a curtain and a vase anf it will be gone
If you’re having a bad day, just remember that it’s someone’s job to collect chameleon mucus
25 pound B00BS
the last thing is hilarious😂
Neurotypicals are gluttons
So it's a shear-thickening fluid?
Why did the tongue close up look like it was being eaten tho?