Department of Biology, University of Ottawa, 30 Marie Curie, Ottawa, Ontario K1N 6N5, Canada.
Integr Comp Biol. 2024 Sep 17;64(2):586-597. doi: 10.1093/icb/icae028.
Flying insects vary greatly in body size and wing proportions, significantly impacting their flight energetics. Generally, the larger the insect, the slower its flight wingbeat frequency. However, variation in frequency is also explained by differences in wing proportions, where larger-winged insects tend to have lower frequencies. These associations affect the energy required for flight. The correlated evolution of flight form and function can be further defined using a lineage of closely related bee species varying in body mass. The decline in flight wingbeat frequency with increasing size is paralleled by the flight mass-specific metabolic rate. The specific scaling exponents observed can be predicted from the wing area allometry, where a greater increase (hyperallometry) leads to a more pronounced effect on flight energetics, and hypoallometry can lead to no change in frequency and metabolic rate across species. The metabolic properties of the flight muscles also vary with body mass and wing proportions, as observed from the activity of glycolytic enzymes and the phospholipid compositions of muscle tissue, connecting morphological differences with muscle metabolic properties. The evolutionary scaling observed across species is recapitulated within species. The static allometry observed within the bumblebee Bombus impatiens, where the wing area is proportional and isometric, affects wingbeat frequency and metabolic rate, which is predicted to decrease with an increase in size. Intraspecific variation in flight muscle tissue properties is also related to flight metabolic rate. The role of developmental processes and phenotypic plasticity in explaining intraspecific differences is central to our understanding of flight energetics. These studies provide a framework where static allometry observed within species gives rise to evolutionary allometry, connecting the evolution of size, form, and function associated with insect flight.
飞行昆虫的体型和翅膀比例差异很大,这对它们的飞行能量学有很大影响。一般来说,昆虫体型越大,其翅膀拍打频率越低。然而,频率的变化也可以用翅膀比例的差异来解释,即翅膀较大的昆虫往往频率较低。这些关联影响飞行所需的能量。通过研究一系列身体质量不同的密切相关的蜜蜂物种,可以进一步定义飞行形态和功能的相关进化。随着体型的增大,飞行翅膀拍打频率的下降与飞行质量特异性代谢率相平行。观察到的特定比例指数可以根据翅膀面积的异速生长来预测,其中更大的增加(超异速生长)对飞行能量学有更明显的影响,而异速生长可能导致物种间频率和代谢率没有变化。飞行肌肉的代谢特性也随身体质量和翅膀比例而变化,如糖酵解酶的活性和肌肉组织的磷脂组成所观察到的那样,将形态差异与肌肉代谢特性联系起来。在物种间观察到的进化比例也在物种内得到再现。在大黄蜂 Bombus impatiens 中观察到的静态比例,即翅膀面积成比例且等距,影响翅膀拍打频率和代谢率,预计随着体型的增加而降低。飞行肌肉组织特性的种内变异也与飞行代谢率有关。在解释种内差异时,发育过程和表型可塑性的作用至关重要。这些研究提供了一个框架,其中物种内观察到的静态比例导致进化比例,将与昆虫飞行相关的大小、形态和功能的进化联系起来。