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Author | Topic: Winter Project | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
dronestar Member Posts: 1464 From: usa Joined: Member Rating: 6.7
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Hi Tanypteryx,
Not sure if this is the best place to add this, sorry in advance if this is too off-topic for the thread, but I found the most interesting site of infographics that included the moving wing pattern of a dragonfly:Tabletop Whale I expected the wings to move symmetrically, at least in pairs, (as all other insects, and birds?). However, while the poster cautions that this isn't a fully accurate scientific representation, the animation does seem to show that the wings move in a rotational style, almost like a rotary asynchronous piston engine pointed upward. I've always marveled at how quick and maneuverable the dragonfly can fly, and if the movement's depiction is correct, I was just wondering if you could give more/any information about its evolved wing pattern. Or debunk it. : ( thanks
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dronestar Member Posts: 1464 From: usa Joined: Member Rating: 6.7
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Thanks for the info Tanyp, verrry interesting.
At the moment I am interested in the early history of flight when man tried to authentically copy birds, with usually disastrous results. Kind of understandable, birds DO make flight look easy, . . . go figure. But scientists today have shown how really complicated their flight is. For example, until recently, I never knew that birds obtain lift when their wings move FORWARD. The infographic kind of shows this. Back to the dragonflies, thanks for confirming, their wings can move independently and longitudinally, but normally move synchronously in pairs. They are a marvel to watch when flying. Perhaps the humming bird is the only other magnificent flyer to compare. I know in prehistoric times, dragonflies were enormous. So I had to google Megaloprepus caerulatus to see how big we have them now: I've quickly googled Georg Rüppell. Found his name but didn't find his films. In my travels, I've seen some amazing insects. I remember seeing a wickedly cool looking metallic purple bumblebee in Uganda. Colorful beetles in the Amazon rain forest. For some reason I often see a single praying mantis during a visit. The mantis are good photo subjects. You can get really close, they are not fidgety or scared. But dragonflies . . . never once did I ever photograph a dragonfly, closeup. It amazes me that you do this for a living. You must be a 'dragonfly whisperer.'
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dronestar Member Posts: 1464 From: usa Joined: Member Rating: 6.7
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Hello again Tanypteryx,
I think I am rapidly becoming a dragonfly enthusiast. Can I come with you on your next research trip? I could help carry the gear, scout photo locations, and make strawberry daiquiris when back at the research tent. I found the following web site as an example of dragonfly flight (sorry, not sure how to embed video into this forum): https://youtu.be/m5XUdvBO_TE Do dragonflies see in slow motion? | The Kid Should See This The website shows examples of slowed motion videos of dragonflies in flight. It shows the wings operating, at least temporarily, autonomously/out of sync as you reported. Extremely interesting. But the reason I am posting is because I have found another interesting aspect. According to this BBC video, the dragonfly can supposedly see in "slow motion." While humans can see at about 60 frames per second, dragonflies can see about 200 frames per second. (Houseflies can see about 250 frames per second). So I am curious, . . . a four-propellor drone helicopter sometimes has on-board 6-axis gyro to steady it's flight. I am presuming the dragonflies high frame rate of sight also helps the dragonfly in flight, particularly when chasing (and catching) its prey. The microprocessor of a 'brain' that links its individual wings and 360 degree sight in nanoseconds is a wonder. Can you comment?
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dronestar Member Posts: 1464 From: usa Joined: Member Rating: 6.7
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Thanks for the reply and info Tany,
"dragonflies may have 30 or so opsins." Wow, I had thought only a few other animals had more opsins than man (some octopus have a dozen?). But an insect with 30? Amazing. A 10-bit HDTV can show a range of 1.07 billion possible colors. IF we divide that by the six primary and secondary colors, we get about 166,666,666 shades of orange. I presume most humans could not discern that many shades of orange. And as a designer, I can confidently state humans only need about . . . three, maybe four shades of oranges in life. And yet, nature has given a dragonfly the advantage to possibly discern even more, . . . exponentially more, . . . shades of orange? The dragonfly is pretty impressive. Many thanks for the PM, I replied.
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dronestar Member Posts: 1464 From: usa Joined: Member Rating: 6.7
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The idea of MILLIONS of shades of orange to be offered, . . . contrasted with being the very LEAST favorite colour, . . . strikes me as being hilariously ironic. However, . . . maybe dragonflies like the colour orange. Who am I to tell some random dragonfly what its preferred colour is? The nerve.
The eyes are also broken up into different zones with different diameter or aperture and different focal lengths. Wow.
only fire nerve impulses if they detect the color and flight pattern of a female which it then imitates precisely." Amazing. Reminds me of advanced cameras that can detect a face or subject at a designated depth and then snaps the shutter automatically. Thanks for the recommendation "Eyes to See, the Astonishing Variety of Vision in Nature". Yeah, it sounds like something I would very much enjoy. The book is offered on Amazon for less than $18, and with a hardcover to boot.
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dronestar Member Posts: 1464 From: usa Joined: Member Rating: 6.7
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Hi Ringo,
As a friend of mine used to say, the only things that should ever be orange are pumpkins and oranges. Just for good measure, . . . can we also declare presidents should never be orange?
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dronestar Member Posts: 1464 From: usa Joined: Member Rating: 6.7 |
So we have 3 primary colors and they have 30 primary colors. While I am being silly posting about the color orange, . . . . . . do we know what colors the dragonflies opsins detect? Are they weighted toward a particular hue? You mentioned ultra-violet. Can there be many shades of ultra-violet that multiple opsins detect? A bee is attracted to the shape of a flower's ultra-violet pattern. But I presume dragonflies do not seek out flowers for the same reason, if at all, correct? Dragonflies having so many opsins is 'bugging' me. Nature, what the hell? Why? I may be compelled to buy the book you recommended sooner than later. I wish the book reviewers would have written that the illustrations inside were more polished, my best style for learning is visual.
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dronestar Member Posts: 1464 From: usa Joined: Member Rating: 6.7 |
orange the color and orange the fruit I'm embarrassed to say I only speak English. When traveling, I learn a dozen or so phrases in other languages as I need them, then the words are completely forgotten after I return home. In my case, attempting to speak Chinese was worse than not trying to speak Chinese. I HIGHLY regret not taking any languages in school or college.
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dronestar Member Posts: 1464 From: usa Joined: Member Rating: 6.7 |
Hi Tany,
You may have read about the giant lacewing (50mm wings, pretty big, eh?) found on an Arkansas Walmart facade a decade ago. It was originally mislabeled.
quote: But if the picture below is accurate, this lacewing's wings don't look like they fold over the body. Which is why it was mislabeled? Can you clarify? Thanks Tany https://www.sciencedaily.com/...ses/2023/02/230227161347.htm Giant lacewing: Insect thought extinct in eastern US found in a Walmart | New Scientist
quote: Edited by dronestar, : added Palin quote
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