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Crouching scientist hidden dragonfly: monitoring insect lifestyles in the air and the mud.


When Martin Wikelski and David Wilcove went bird-watching in Cape May Cape May, city (1990 pop. 4,668), Cape May co., S N.J., on Cape May peninsula and the Atlantic Ocean; settled in the 1600s, inc. 1857. One of the nation's oldest beach resorts, it became known in the mid-19th cent. , N.J., one fall day in 2004, they were surprised to find that the main spectacle had four wings instead of two. Migrating dragonflies filled the air, flashing iridescent ir·i·des·cent  
adj.
1. Producing a display of lustrous, rainbowlike colors: an iridescent oil slick; iridescent plumage.

2.
 green and blue as they hovered over dunes, perched, then zipped off.

"They were everywhere," says Wikelski, who's a biologist at Princeton University Princeton University, at Princeton, N.J.; coeducational; chartered 1746, opened 1747, rechartered 1748, called the College of New Jersey until 1896. Schools and Research Facilities
. He and his Princeton colleague Wilcove had come to admire birds that take a break on the long haul up and down the East Coast, but insects on long journeys need rest stops too.

Wikelski has studied bird migration and pioneered the tracking of individuals on long flights. He says that as he and Wilcove marveled at the dragonfly dragonfly, any insect of the order Odonata, which also includes the damselfly. Members of this order are generally large predatory insects and characteristically have chewing mouthparts and four membranous, net-veined wings; they undergo complete metamorphosis.  air show along the New Jersey coast, they thought, why not track them too?

The scientists knew the difficulties that they were likely to face. Even the newest, lightest tracking devices might weigh down the insects so much that they couldn't get off the ground. Or the dragonflies might simply refuse to keep migrating after a scientist had glued baggage onto them.

"We knew people would think this was a crazy idea," Wikelski says.

He and his colleagues have now published an account of their efforts. It's one of several recent works exploring hard-to-see aspects of dragonfly life.

Although dragonflies are among the most familiar of insects, science is just beginning to unravel their complex life stories, which start in water and end in air. That cycle sends dragonflies into clashes and coalitions with an unusually wide range of other creatures.

Beyond the satisfaction in discovering details of the lives of charismatic animals, the new approaches to dragonfly ecology have implications for conserving these creatures and the wetlands they rule.

WHAT'S UP? Migration biologists have spent decades tracking animals en masse. Wikelski contends that what's needed now is an individual bird's-eye view, or bug's-eye view, ofhow migration works.

The migrant dragonflies that Wikelski set about tracking were the common green darners (Anaxjunius), robust fliers with blue abdomens that turn purple as the temperature rises.

Of the 5,200 species of dragonflies and related damselflies in the world, scientists estimate that 25 to 50 make seasonal migrations. There's evidence for migrations among nine North American North American

named after North America.


North American blastomycosis
see North American blastomycosis.

North American cattle tick
see boophilusannulatus.
 species.

These aren't migrations in the bird sense of the word. Each insect makes a one-way trip and another generation returns, scientists presume.

To follow single dragonflies, Wikelski decided on radio tracking.

He sought help from Jim Cochran of Sparrow Systems in Fisher, Ill., who built ultralight ul·tra·light  
n.
A recreational aircraft constructed of lightweight materials such as aluminum, graphite composites, or high-strength plastics, having an engine of roughly 15 to 40 horsepower and often resembling a hang glider with wings.
 transmitters. "Each one of them is like a Stradivarius," says Wikelski.

To test a transmitter, which costs about $200, Wikelski and his colleagues fastened it on a female dragonfly's underside with a nontoxic glue--eyelash adhesive.

Wikelski recalls some nervous moments watching the dragonfly right herself on her perch. The transmitter may be light, but it's still about one-third the weight of a dragonfly itself.

Finally, the transmitter-bearing dragonfly took to the air--and stayed aloft. The team was exuberant. "It was like the launching of the space shuttle; everyone was jumping up and down," Wikelski says.

In all, the researchers attached transmitters to 14 dragonflies.

The researchers followed the insects from the ground as best they could with chase vehicles. At least twice a day, Wikelski got a better view by taking off in a small airplane to locate the insects.

The group followed the individual dragonflies for an average of 6 days, in which the insects covered about 60 kilometers.

On any given day, the insects either made one long flight of up to 6 hours or stayed in one area. "They behave like birds," says Wikelski.

They also stayed put on days when wind speeds topped 25 km per hour, even if the gusts would have swept them along their way.

In an upcoming Biology Letters, Wikelski's group describes radio tracking individual dragonflies. Now, the team is calling for a bigger effort, including a satellite dedicated to tracking small animals.

ELUSIVE LADLES Sophie Foster, now at the University of Toronto Research at the University of Toronto has been responsible for the world's first electronic heart pacemaker, artificial larynx, single-lung transplant, nerve transplant, artificial pancreas, chemical laser, G-suit, the first practical electron microscope, the first cloning of T-cells,  at Mississauga, has studied the Hine's emerald dragonfly The Hine's Emerald Dragonfly (Somatochlora hineana) is a dragonfly in the family Corduliidae.

Globally, the species is extremely rare. The largest breeding population known is in Door County, Wisconsin.
 (Somatochlora hineana) in Wisconsin. Although it doesn't migrate, there were plenty of questions about its movements. Such as where the females hang out when they're not mating.

In 1995, the federal government listed the Hine's emerald dragonfly as endangered. It survives in patches in the Midwest. Foster studied in Wisconsin's Door County in 2000. She worked with Daniel Soluk, who is now at the University of South Dakota Nomenclature
  • The abbreviation USD is the most widely used title of the school. (The University of San Diego also employs the same abbreviation.)
  • It is also often referred to as "the U" by locals.
  • "usd" is used only in Internet domain names.
 in Vermillion.

The emerald dragonfly males patrol breeding grounds near spring-fed streams. For years, biologists have speculated on why there are so few females in many male territories.

Scientists have proposed various answers, such as die-offs of females or refuges for them in other locations. But Foster found no published tests of any of these ideas.

She and Soluk first wondered whether the missing emerald dragonfly females had ever existed. Dragonflies of that species, like others, start life as eggs in water. They hatch into small aquatic creatures that prey voraciously on other little aquatic creatures. Dragonflies in the final larval larval

1. pertaining to larvae.

2. larvate.


larval migrans
see cutaneous and visceral larva migrans.
 form pull themselves out of the water unto a perch, such as an overhanging twig TWIG - Tree-Walking Instruction Generator.

A code generator language. ML-Twig is an SML/NJ variant.

["Twig Language Manual", S.W.K. Tijang, CS TR 120, Bell Labs, 1986].
 and shed their skin.

To get a tally of the sexes of the maturing insects, Foster scoured the edges of wet patches in the Wisconsin woods, looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 the cast-off cast·off  
n.
1. One that has been discarded.

2. Printing A calculation of the amount of space a manuscript will occupy when set into type.

adj. also cast-off
Discarded; rejected.
 skins, or exuvia. "The larvae Larvae, in Roman religion
Larvae: see lemures.
 are impossible to find," she says.

A barely distinguishable dot on an exuvium's underside indicates that it came from a male. Foster found approximately the same numbers of exuvia from males and females, indicating that the sexes reached adulthood in equal numbers.

To determine the whereabouts of adults, Foster organized simultaneous dragonfly chases in the wet breeding grounds and in nearby dry areas, such as meadows, that might work as female sanctuaries.

The surveyors found less than half as many females in the wet areas as in the neighboring dry ones and twice as many males in the breeding areas as in the meadows.

The researchers also hung out strips of flypaper to see whether the females were staying in areas providing more food. However, the wet areas actually offered better dining. Foster and Soluk reported their findings in the January Biological Conservation.

Foster speculates that sexual harassment sexual harassment, in law, verbal or physical behavior of a sexual nature, aimed at a particular person or group of people, especially in the workplace or in academic or other institutional settings, that is actionable, as in tort or under equal-opportunity statutes.  might have driven females to avoid the male-dominated turf. Dragonflies have attracted the interest of biologists studying conflicts within and between the sexes.

Males of several dragonfly species are known to sabotage each other's mating attempts by scraping previously deposited sperm out of a female's reproductive tract before delivering their own. Many males guard their mates, even dragging a female around by her neck after mating.

In Hine's emeralds, Foster has seen importunate im·por·tu·nate  
adj.
Troublesomely urgent or persistent in requesting; pressingly entreating: an importunate job seeker.



im·por
 males trying so relentlessly to mate that they force a female to the ground. Even females that cooperate can spend more than an hour in an encounter. "That seems like a really long time to monopolize mo·nop·o·lize  
tr.v. mo·nop·o·lized, mo·nop·o·liz·ing, mo·nop·o·liz·es
1. To acquire or maintain a monopoly of.

2. To dominate by excluding others: monopolized the conversation.
 a female," says Foster.

On the basis of these observations, Foster speculates that males may interfere so much with a female's search for food and other activities that females stay away from the guy zone unless specifically seeking a mate and laying eggs. "I couldn't help but draw parallels with going to a bar," Foster says.

The finding "illustrates that wetland species aren't just wetland species," she says. It highlights the importance of conserving areas that are dry as well as those typically considered dragonfly habitat.

SWIM WITH THE DEVIL While Foster looked for missing females, Lauren Pintor and Soluk were investigating a question that might have seemed--at first--like a no-brainer: Were crayfish crayfish or crawfish, freshwater crustacean smaller than but structurally very similar to its marine relative the lobster, and found in ponds and streams in most parts of the world except Africa. Crayfish grow some 3 to 4 in. (7.6–10.  that eat young Hinds emerald larvae bad for the long-term survival of the endangered species endangered species, any plant or animal species whose ability to survive and reproduce has been jeopardized by human activities. In 1999 the U.S. government, in accordance with the U.S. ?

Red devil crayfish share the wetlands where Hine's emerald dragonflies live. The crayfish, with streaks of brilliant red on their claws, excavate stream-bank burrows, where they hollow out chambers that hold little pools even in dry weather. The last part of their scientific name, Cambarus diogenes, honors the Greek philosopher Diogenes, who took to living in a tub.

Pintor says that she started wondering about those crayfish after a drought left the dragonfly habitat dry for several weeks. "When the habitat was flowing with water once again, many of the Hine's emerald larvae were alive and well," she says. She began trying to figure out how they had survived.

The last wet places around had been the crayfish burrows. Those would have been puzzling refuges for dragonfly larvae, however, since they'd seem to be likely death zones.

A different picture emerged when Pintor tracked the larvae both in crayfish burrows and in the streams themselves. When water was abundant and ran in the streambeds, more larvae showed up there than in the burrows, she found. But, as the water channels dried up, larvae populations grew in the burrows.

The crayfish structures provide a life-saving refuge for dragonfly larvae during summer droughts, even though some probably get eaten there, Pintor, now of the University of California, Davis The University of California, Davis, commonly known as UC Davis, is one of the ten campuses of the University of California, and was established as the University Farm in 1905.  and Soluk report in the July Biological Conservation. Without this information, Pintor notes, well-meaning conservation managers might have culled the crayfish in the dragonfly's habitat, inadvertently dooming many larvae.

WETLAND WIDE WEB Dragonflies are predators as well as prey. A study of ponds in northern Florida reveals an intricate cascade of effects. Tiffany Knight, now &Washington University in St. Louis “Washington University” redirects here. For other uses, see Washington (disambiguation).
Washington University in St. Louis is a private, coeducational, research university located in St. Louis, Missouri.
, and her colleagues compared fishfree ponds with fish-filled ones.

Fewer than half as many dragonflies flitted around the fish-filled ones as around the fish-free ones, say the researchers. Fish readily eat dragonfly larvae, Knight explains. Female dragonflies may shy away from Verb 1. shy away from - avoid having to deal with some unpleasant task; "I shy away from this task"
avoid - stay clear from; keep away from; keep out of the way of someone or something; "Her former friends now avoid her"
 fish-filled waters when choosing sites to lay eggs.

The size of pond-side dragonfly populations affects other creatures, Knight proposes. Dragonflies in the Southeastern United States, according to an earlier study, hunt bees. If pollen is a limiting factor for flower propagation, a bee shortage reduces plants' success.

The researchers monitored pollinators visiting shrubby shrub·by  
adj. shrub·bi·er, shrub·bi·est
1. Consisting of, planted with, or covered with shrubs.

2. Of or resembling a shrub.
 St. John's worts St. John’s wort

indicates animosity. [Flower Symbolism: Flora Symbolica, 177]

See : Hatred


St. John’s wort

defense against fairies, evil spirits, the Devil. [Br.
 and broadleaf broad·leaf  
adj.
Broad-leaved.

Adj. 1. broadleaf - having relatively broad rather than needlelike or scalelike leaves
broad-leafed, broad-leaved
 arrowhead plants near the edges of ponds. More pollinators, and in particular more bees, buzzed around the plants beside the fish ponds than around the plants at fishfree ponds.

To see whether the difference could affect the plant, Knight added pollen to some of the flowers. Both species set more seed when Knight visited them, a sign that pollen was a limiting factor. The limitation showed up especially strongly in the plants beside ponds with no fish.

Acting through the dragonflies, fish are driving the reproductive success of nearbyland plants, Knight and her colleagues concluded in the Oct. 6, 2005 Nature. The wet-dry dragonfly lifestyle links the aquatic food web to the terrestrial one.

Wetlands themselves are disappearing fast, and the international body that tracks the fate of species, the International Union for the Conservation of Nature International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN) or World Conservation Union, international organization founded in 1948 to encourage the preservation of wildlife, natural environments, and living resources.  and Natural Resources, or IUCN IUCN

International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources.
, has raised concerns about more than 100 species of dragonflies and damselflies.

It's clear, though, that Internet-connected, international fan clubs focused on dragonflies aren't in peril. There are also booming populations of dragonfly earrings, fabric patterns, and even Christmas lights. If some of the flesh-and-blood dragonflies become rare, they're among the few insects that people might miss.
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Title Annotation:Martin Wikelski and David Wilcove research
Author:Milius, Susan
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Cover story
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Aug 12, 2006
Words:1860
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