Burrows Malcolm
Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 3EJ, UK.
J Exp Biol. 2009 Sep 1;212(17):2844-55. doi: 10.1242/jeb.032326.
The structure of the hind limbs and the kinematics of their movements that propel jumping in planthopper insects (Hemiptera, Auchenorrhyncha, Fulgoroidea, Issidae) were analysed. The propulsion for a jump was delivered by rapid movements of the hind legs that both move in the same plane beneath the body and parallel to its longitudinal axis, as revealed in high-speed sequences of images captured at rates up to 7500 images s(-1). The first and key movement was the depression of both trochantera about their coxae, powered by large depressor muscles in the thorax, accompanied by rapid extension of the tibiae about their femora. The initial movements of the two trochantera of the hind legs were synchronised to within 0.03 ms. The hind legs are only 20% longer than the front and middle legs, represent 65% of the body length, and have a ratio of 1.8 relative to the cube root of the body mass. The two hind coxae have a different structure to those in frog- and leafhoppers. They are fused at the mid-line, covered ventrally by transparent cuticle, and each is fixed laterally to a part of the internal skeleton called the pleural arch that extends to the articulation of a hind wing. A small and pointed, ventral coxal protrusion covered in microtrichia engages with a raised, smooth, white patch on a dorsal femur when a hind leg is levated (cocked) in preparation for a jump. In the best jumps by a male Issus, the body was accelerated in 0.8 ms to a take-off velocity of 5.5 m s(-1), was subjected to a force of 719 g and was displaced a horizontal distance of 1.1 m. This performance required an energy output of 303 microJ, a power output of 388 mW and exerted a force of 141 mN, or more than 700 times its body mass. This performance implies that a catapult mechanism must be used, and that Issus ranks alongside the froghopper Philaenus as one of the best insect jumpers.
对飞虱昆虫(半翅目,头喙亚目,蜡蝉总科,瓢蜡蝉科)后肢的结构及其推动跳跃的运动学进行了分析。如以高达7500帧/秒的速率拍摄的高速图像序列所示,跳跃的推进力由后腿的快速运动产生,后腿在身体下方的同一平面内且平行于身体纵轴移动。第一个也是关键的运动是两个转节围绕其基节下沉,由胸部的大型降肌驱动,同时胫节围绕其股骨快速伸展。后腿的两个转节的初始运动同步到0.03毫秒以内。后腿仅比前腿和中腿长20%,占体长的65%,相对于体重的立方根的比例为1.8。两个后基节的结构与青蛙和叶蝉的不同。它们在中线处融合,腹面覆盖着透明角质层,每个基节在侧面固定到称为胸膜弓的内部骨骼部分,该胸膜弓延伸到后翅的关节处。当一条后腿抬起(翘起)准备跳跃时,一个覆盖着微毛的小而尖的腹侧基节突起与股骨背面的一个凸起、光滑、白色斑块接合。在雄性瓢蜡蝉的最佳跳跃中,身体在0.8毫秒内加速到5.5米/秒的起飞速度,受到719克的力,水平位移1.1米。这种表现需要303微焦的能量输出、388毫瓦的功率输出,并施加141毫牛的力,即超过其体重的700倍。这种表现意味着必须使用弹射机制,并且瓢蜡蝉与沫蝉属的蛙沫蝉一样,是最好的昆虫跳跃者之一。