Friday, 31 May 2013
Tuesday, 28 May 2013
Insects Are Cool, Too
One
of our esteemed Entomology lecturers has for the past few weeks been preaching
doom and gloom about the immediate future of ENTO304 participants’ insect
collecting prospects. ‘Hope you've done all your collecting: it’s getting too
cold for insects!’ he warns us. ‘The weather’s turning!’ And it’s true. If
there’s one thing that’s good about winter, it’s the diminishing of pesky
houseflies in our flat. It
came as some surprise, then, when I discovered a whole book dedicated to the Entomology of Antarctica. When I think of life in Antarctica ,
I think penguins, and that’s pretty much as far as I get. But what if I were to
tell you that the biggest terrestrial animal in Antarctica
is actually an insect? What if I were to add that there are more insect species in Antarctica than any other Antarctic
animal?
I use ‘insect’ in the loosest term: from sea-level to 2000 metres above,
The
parasitic arthropods, which include lice, ticks, a single species of flea and parasitic mites, are probably the easiest to understand. Sucking lice live
on the seals of Antarctica, and ticks, biting lice and parasitic mites live on Antarctica ’s birds. Even when diving, warm-blooded
animals are able to provide these invertebrates with a much warmer habitat than could
otherwise be found, and a considerably greater stability of microclimate which means such arthropods need little in the way of their own homeostatic mechanisms. Parasitism
is also the obvious choice in a depauperate environment in terms of a ready and
guaranteed food supply. Desiccation, the main adversary of the free-living
insects, is significantly less of a problem for creatures small enough to live under the protective, waterproof layers of feathers or fur. Colony behaviour of the
majority of Antarctic birds and seals facilitates the dispersal of these
invertebrates.
Not
all of Antarctica is covered in ice, and not
all of it is covered in ice all year round. Antarctica ’s
free-living arthropods - midges, springtails and non-parasitic mites – can be
found in habitats involving such diverse geomorphology as snow-melt streams,
old lava flows, freshwater or brackish ponds, scree-slopes, moraine deposits,
soil and exposed stone. Because all Antarctica’s large vertebrate fauna are
marine rather than terrestrial, these arthropods are Antarctica ’s
only terrestrial animals.
Compared
to the parasites, the free-living arthropods are much more subject to the
forbidding environment that we normally associate with Antarctica :
extreme cold and extreme dryness. Temperature, as with all insects, determines
activity levels of these arthropods and thus habitats that receive the most
sun in summer, such as northward facing slopes, are more frequently inhabited. Though
generally preferring of the dark, the warmed rocks
provide a microclimate that allows the arthropods to move. Ultimately, however,
arthropod distribution is restricted by moisture.
The free-living arthropods live in
close proximity to plants, which in Antarctica
means mosses, lichens and algae; though fungi, liverworts and grasses may be
found in more northern areas. These primary producers provide the invertebrates with food and moisture. Combined, this is the simple
entirety of Antarctica ’s terrestrial
ecosystem. Springtails, the least desiccation-tolerant, are usually found
amongst moss roots, while mites, the hardiest, inhabit a wider variety of rocky
areas which can be comparatively drier - porous rock cavities and the underside
of shales near temporary melt-water rivulets are common
habitats.
You
can’t get very far into Antarctic entomology without coming across Belgica antarctica: Antarctica ’s
largest (roughly 0.5 cm long) endemic terrestrial species and the flightless version of only two
true Antarctic insects, the midge. This species breeds in brackish waters and lives
near pools and streams associated with mosses. Recent studies on B. antarctica
have found that, due to their high desiccation tolerance, the midge larvae are
able to utilise a vapour gradient in the presence of ice that reduces the
melting point of their body fluids so they don’t freeze over winter. All the
free-living arthropods are dormant through the winter in whatever developmental
stage they have reached. Few populations of any of these arthropods show great annual
stability, changing seasonally according to local migrations in response to
moisture gradients. Suitable areas of habitation are also those that are sheltered from Antarctica ’s strong winds, which can increase the rate of
desiccation and lower temperatures; though it may be a dispersal mechanism for
springtails which have been collected from the air with nets.
Perhaps
it is ironic or perhaps it is poetic that the largest land mass in the southern
hemisphere should have the smallest terrestrial ecosystem consisting of some of
the smallest macroscopic life, or perhaps it is just amazing that such animals
can be found here at all. Regardless of your take, the fact remains: Antarctica is more than just penguins.
Antarctic springtails amongst moss
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Thanks
to Insect Habitats in Antarctica by J. L. Gressitt and R. E. Leech for opening my eyes.
Thursday, 23 May 2013
Long Legs and a Long Way to Grow
Just to continue with the long-legged theme of my blug so far, here's a
quick share of something that made me smile when I walked into our bathroom the
other week:
This type of spider is what I have always known as a daddy long-legs (or in this case, a baby long- legs) from the family Pholcidae. They can grow to be very big and usually hang upside-down in untidy, irregular webs of their own creation... but this tiny novice seemed perfectly content hanging from a ready-made hair on the side of our (otherwise quite immaculate) basin.
This type of spider is what I have always known as a daddy long-legs (or in this case, a baby long- legs) from the family Pholcidae. They can grow to be very big and usually hang upside-down in untidy, irregular webs of their own creation... but this tiny novice seemed perfectly content hanging from a ready-made hair on the side of our (otherwise quite immaculate) basin.
Saturday, 18 May 2013
The Crane Fly Calamity
It’s
a tale of childhood woe: a school yard during lunch time. Rain drums
meditatively on the classroom roof and sheets off the verandah gutters into the
mists of recollection. Children, as game as they ever were, race the length of the
classroom verandahs with cricket bats, their squeals and shouts energising the
greyness of the average autumn day. From out of the deluge a lone creature
flies falteringly, gangly legs dangling as it drunkenly intercepts the verandah
wall. Having found a dry oasis, it lodges spread-eagled under the white roof above
where a dozen others of its kind also shelter from the storm. But no less
muffled by memory than the massacre that follows is the war cry of the children
as they hoist their cricket bats: ‘Kill the mosquitoes!’ The
Crane Fly has escaped a watery grave only to meet its fate in the swing of
ignorance.
Crane flies are not mosquitoes. ‘Crane fly’ is one of many common names that typically encompasses the families Tipulidae (true crane flies), Limoniidae (Limoniid crane flies), Cylindrotomidae (long-bodied crane flies) and also sometimes Pediciidae (hairy-eyed crane flies), all of which can be included in the superfamily Tipuloidea. Elsewhere in the world, crane flies are known as daddy long legs, gollywhoppers and even mosquito eaters (yet another myth of the misunderstood Tipulidae, who literally wouldn't hurt a fly). Larvae are often used by fishermen for trout bait, and these immature forms of Tipulidae are colloquially known as leatherjackets. Mosquitoes, on the other hand, fall into the single family of Culicidae. Apart from the larval name of ‘wriggler’, the only variation to their common name is probably just the choice of expletive used to refer to them after being bitten.
Types of flies referred to as ‘crane flies’, roughly in order from left to right of family relatedness to true crane flies.
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Both crane flies and mosquitoes are of the Diptera order (as both have only two wings and a pair of halteres), but they are only related to the extent of the suborder Nematocera. The oldest Tipuloidea fossils date back to around 240 million years (lower Triassic period), while most Culicidae fossils are around 38 thousand years old - though it is thought Culicidae diverged some time during the Jurassic period. Although the relationships within crane flies, like so much else in taxonomy, are under constant review (for the latest, see here), as are the phylogenetic relationships within Nematocera (if you’re so inclined, there’s some bed time reading in this too), the distinctness of crane flies to mosquitoes is not uncertain due to a variety of morphological and biological differences.
Both mosquitoes and crane flies are semi-aquatic holometabolous insects, as they have
a larval and pupal stage in their life cycle which relies on water. For mosquito species, larvae are found in all kinds of standing water bodies, such
as streams, ditches, ponds and puddles, and some species have a relatively high
salinity tolerance. Tipulid larvae require moisture so they don’t dry out,
but inhabit wet terrestrial habitats such as soil or rotting plants, and are
restricted to fresh water. As with many Dipterans, it is when mosquitoes and crane flies are in their larval stage that they show the most perceptibly
distinct morphology.
Unlike crane
flies, mosquito larvae have eyes on either side of an ovoid head, and a ‘moustache’
of bristles above the mouthparts, as well as numerous hair-like projections all
over the body. Most species filter microorganisms and organic matter, though
some eat the larvae of other mosquito species. The breathing tube near the end
of their abdomen is probably the most characteristic structure of Culicidae larvae - it means they float at the surface of the water. Crane fly larvae have breathing siphons at
the end of their abdomen and tend to feed on decomposing plant leaves and associated
microflora, or munch on the roots of living plants. All life stages of both these insects are important food sources for fish, birds, amphibians and other insects
higher in the food chains of the environments they inhabit.
Mosquito larva floating just under
the surface of the water facing
downwards (left) and a bird's-eye
view of a fat crane fly larva (right),
head at the top.
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Different sizes: crane flies can be BIG.
that much of a target.
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Granted,
adult mosquitoes and crane flies have a superficial resemblance in that they both
have long legs. However, compared to body size, crane flies’ legs are much
longer than mosquitoes’ legs (compare the second photo of the Culicid to that of the Tipulid at the end of this post).
The average crane fly is also quite big, though often Limoniid crane flies will be a similar size to mosquitoes. Some mosquito
legs are striped white, so as to seem ethereal. When threatened, mosquitoes
will hold one or both of their hind legs above their body in a characteristically
curved position (consult the shadow of the first Culicid picture at the end of this post – you might need to duck down slightly to see them
on your screen). True crane flies show and do neither of these things. Also, the
structure of mosquitoes’ feet allow them to cling to smooth vertical surfaces,
while true crane flies have a great deal of trouble with this. They can often be
seen bobbing around windows or sliding and scraping along smooth surfaces searching
for footholds, while mosquitoes try their hardest not to be seen.
Crane fly flight can be recognised as the kind that will never win any races (i.e. slow, cumbersome and generally erratic) due to their long legs; some crane flies have recognised a lost cause when they are one and taken up flightlessness instead (yes, Chionea species, I’m looking at you). When at rest, true crane flies hold their wings away from their body, while mosquitoes fold their wings. Mosquito wings have thick setae (bristles) along both sides of the wing veins (which make the wings look quite furry under the microscope) and are highly scleritised (hardened) at the base of the wing, unlike Tipulidae. Like all winged insects, crane flies and mosquitoes have unique wing venation that makes them distinct. For example, the subcoastal vein (Sc) ends at the coastal vein (C) in mosquitoes but in crane flies ends at the first radial vein (R1). Mosquitoes also have just one anal vein (A) while crane flies have two, and crane flies also have a discal cell (dm) that is absent in mosquitoes.
Wings of Culiseta species versus wings of Tipula species
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Though burdened fliers, all crane flies do so uncomplainingly and silently; this is not the case for mosquitoes where some species, such as the tiger mosquito (Ades albopictus), make that dreaded high-pitched whining sound we all know and hate. Male mosquitoes use this sound to locate females; crane flies travel blindly to encounter mates if there are none immediately present after emergence from the pupal stage.
Head morphology - including
mouth-parts - of a crane fly (top) and penetration of the stylets of a mosquito (bottom). |
If
you’re still not convinced that crane flies aren't just overgrown mosquitoes in
a good disguise, let the mouth-parts be the clincher for you. There would be no
war on mosquitoes if it weren't for the bloodsucking, disease-spreading ways of
the majority of females, as permitted by her specialised mouth-parts: a
permanently extended, rigid stylet for piercing and sucking (due to elongation of the maxillae and labrum, which remain comparatively
short, separate appendages in crane flies), sheathed by a similarly elongated flexible
lower lip, or ‘labium’ (also significantly shorter in crane flies). Like male mosquitoes, crane flies of both sexes feed on nectar or not at all, and have a life
span of only a few days or weeks. Prolonged rain can mean that crane flies
starve to death.
Further morphological
differentiations include that of the antennae, which vary in crane flies but
are most commonly moderately short, thin and of thread-like or bead-like form. Mosquitoes
have plumose (feathery) antennae. The presence of the ‘transverse V’ or ‘V-shaped
mesonotal suture’ - a groove on the thorax between the bases of the wings - is
also an identifier of Tipulidae in taxonomic keys.
So spread the word! Let crane fly knowledge infiltrate the population in a way similar to but distinctly unlike the spread of malaria in
...Crane flies are not Mosquitoes.
A crane
fly versus two vantages of a 5-legged mosquito.
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I couldn't have written this without:
- Biology of Tipulidae by G. Pritchard (1987)
- The Anatomical Life of the Mosquito by R. E. Snodgrass (1959)
- Global Diversity of Mosquitoes (Insecta: Diptera: Culicidae) in Freshwater by L. M. Rueda (2007)
Pictures of the different types of crane flies (Tipulidae, Cylindrotomidae, Pediciidae, Limoniidae, Trichoceridae, Tanyderidae and Ptychopteridae) were compiled by me. The phylogeny, Tipula wing venation, Tipula wing image, and Culiseta wing image have all been modified.
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