See esmaspäev Olen väljuvate tavaline Arctiinae midagi täiesti teistsugust – microlep! See on Nepticulidae, Stigmella diffasciae, ja see mõõdab on ilmatu 6 mm. Ma ei saa võtta laenu levib see koi – kõik minu pildistatud neptikuliidid on pärit California Teaduste Akadeemiast ja levitanud Dave Wagner, kui ta oli siin järeldoktorantuuris.
Röövikud kaevandavad lehtede ülemist külge Ceanothus ja neid tuntakse vaid Californias Sierra Nevada jalamil. Kui olete nii valmis, on selle perekonna Põhja-Ameerika liikide ülevaatamine täiesti vaba saadaval siin (.pdf).
I could almost get interested in microleps, just for the challenge of getting good at spreading them.
It’s interesting – the scales don’t seem to have gotten tiny in proportion to the moth.
I like the sound of that! You did notice one of the amazing characters of this family, their scales seem to have remained normal size. Those orange tufts on the head are also huge scale eye-caps that nearly cover the entire eye.
Nii, I’m guessing this is an example of a flying bug SO SMALL that the physics it deals with are different, so the wings are different than they would be on a comparable-but-much-larger moth? Or is that not quite happening at this scale? I can’t remember what high relative viscosity of air does to wings.
Hm… Now I’m thinking the wings start to look more like oars on super small fliers vs. feathery like this?
Nii, how’s THAT for a wandering comment. =)
I think you are correct, that once you get this small the moth ends up “swimming” through the air more than flying. Many micros have increased their wing surface using long scales instead of a solid surface, I bet the greater surface area helps with flight. I do know there are some impressive wasps that are much smaller than this moth and have even less wing-like wings! I don’t know the physics at all though…
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