Tiny tags trace dragonfly paths
(Tell me again why they
can't make a GPS collar small enough for a cat?)
Story from BBC
NEWS
The epic journeys taken by
dragonflies searching for warmer climates have been revealed by
scientists in the US.
The team, led by researchers from Princeton
University, found that the insects are capable of flying up to 85
miles (137 km) in a day.
Writing in the journal Biology Letters, the group
describes how it tracked the movements by attaching tiny radio
transmitters to the insects.
A scientific posse followed the signals from a
receiving aeroplane.
Other researchers monitored the insects' progress from
the ground.
Tricks
of the trade
The dragonflies' route took them along the east coast
of America towards the warmer south.
The data revealed that the dragonflies' migration
patterns are strikingly similar to those of songbirds, suggesting
there is a strong evolutionary link to their behaviours.
"Insects have been around far longer than birds,
therefore we suspect that they have been migrating far longer than
birds," said Professor David Wilcove of Princeton University and one
of the authors of the paper.
"It is just possible what we are seeing here are the
basic primitive rules of migration and that birds converged on the
tricks of the trade," he told Science In Action on the BBC World
Service.
Billions of common green darner dragonflies ( Anax
junius ) migrate every year but until now hardly anything was
known about their routes or strategy.
The new research shows there is method behind the
insects' flight behaviour.
For example, the dragonflies tended to only move after
two nights of cooler temperatures, indicating a cold front was
approaching with favourable north-westerly winds.
They also tended to change direction when they met a
large body of water, ensuring they never became stranded out over
the sea.
Two insects were recorded flying out over the ocean
before reversing and skirting down the coastline.
The detailed flight path information was made possible
by tiny radio transmitters developed by the team.
Final
destination
Each transmitter weighed about a third of a gram and
had enough battery life to track an individual for 10 days; but
tagging such small creatures is far from easy.
"The challenge is first catching the dragonfly," said
Professor Wilcove.
Once caught, each transmitter was attached with a
couple of drops of superglue and some eye-lash adhesive.
However, the final destination of the green darners is
still not known because of the power restraints of the transmitter
set-up; and some individuals simply flew out of range of the
scientists.
In the future, the team hopes to refine its techniques
and make the tracking even more hi-tech.
"The dream scenario would be to get a satellite to
pick up the signals from these transmitters," said Professor
Wilcove.
"If you had a satellite like that you could [follow
the migration of] all kinds of birds, dragonflies, and locusts; and,
I think, it would shed tremendous light on the movements of these
organisms."
Story from BBC
NEWS: http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/sci/tech/4759615.stm
Published:
2006/05/10 19:02:47 GMT
© BBC
MMVI

|