Digital Assets

Sycamore Seed Wing — Samara Venation at 3:1 Macro

259.00 د.إ

A sycamore seed wing (samara) photographed at 3:1 macro — the translucent membrane stretched between the wing’s branching venation visible as a network of vascular channels, the seed at the wing’s base creating the asymmetric aerodynamic geometry.

Description

The sycamore samara — the helicopter seed dispersal unit of Acer pseudoplatanus — is an aerodynamic wing structure evolved to autorotate during descent, slowing the seed’s fall and increasing its horizontal dispersal distance. At 3:1 macro reproduction, the wing membrane’s full structure is visible in transmitted backlight: the primary venation branches from the seed attachment point to the wing tip in a regular dichotomous pattern, the secondary and tertiary veins filling the spaces between primaries, and the transparent membrane between veins transmitting the backlight as a luminous surface. The seed itself — at the base of the wing — is opaque and casts a shadow on the wing surface. The asymmetric geometry of the samara that produces autorotation is legible from the image: the seed’s attachment to one end of the wing creates the mass imbalance that initiates the rotation during descent.

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