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Flight efficiency is a key to diverse wing morphologies in small insects.

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TLDR
In this article, the diversity of wing structure in small insects results from aerodynamic efficiency rather than from the requirements to produce elevated forces for flight, while larger insects must use membranous wings for an efficient production of flight forces.
Abstract
Insect wings are hybrid structures that are typically composed of veins and solid membranes. In some of the smallest flying insects, however, the wing membrane is replaced by hair-like bristles attached to a solid root. Bristles and membranous wing surfaces coexist in small but not in large insect species. There is no satisfying explanation for this finding as aerodynamic force production is always smaller in bristled than solid wings. This computational study suggests that the diversity of wing structure in small insects results from aerodynamic efficiency rather than from the requirements to produce elevated forces for flight. The tested wings vary from fully membranous to sparsely bristled and were flapped around a wing root with lift- and drag-based wing kinematic patterns and at different Reynolds numbers (Re). The results show that the decrease in aerodynamic efficiency with decreasing surface solidity is significantly smaller at Re = 4 than Re = 57. A replacement of wing membrane by bristles thus causes less change in energetic costs for flight in small compared to large insects. As a consequence, small insects may fly with bristled and solid wing surfaces at similar efficacy, while larger insects must use membranous wings for an efficient production of flight forces. The above findings are significant for the biological fitness and dispersal of insects that fly at elevated energy expenditures.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Aerodynamics and three-dimensional effect of a translating bristled wing at low Reynolds numbers

Wen-Jay Liu, +1 more
TL;DR: In this article , a 3D model of the bristled wing was constructed to numerically investigate the detailed flow field and the aerodynamic force of the wing, and it was shown that the 3D effect at low Re increases the drag of the fly compared with that of the corresponding 2D wing.
Journal ArticleDOI

Aerodynamics and three-dimensional effect of a translating bristled wing at low Reynolds numbers

Wen-Jay Liu, +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper , a 3D model of the bristled wing was constructed to numerically investigate the detailed flow field and the aerodynamic force of the wing, and it was shown that the 3D effect at low Re increases the drag of the fly compared with that of the corresponding 2D wing.
Journal ArticleDOI

Efficiency and Aerodynamic Performance of Bristled Insect Wings Depending on Reynolds Number in Flapping Flight

TL;DR: Experimental data confirm previous findings from numerical simulations that suggested that for small insects, flying with bristled instead of membranous wings involved less change in energetic costs than for large insects.
Journal ArticleDOI

Flow development and leading edge vorticity in bristled insect wings

TL;DR: In this article , the authors quantified the ability of bristled wings to generate a leading edge vortex (LEV) for lift support during wing flapping, scored its circulation during wing translation, and investigated its behaviour at stroke reversals.
Journal ArticleDOI

Aerodynamic Characteristics of Bristled Wings in Flapping Flight

TL;DR: In this paper , the aerodynamic force, power, and efficiency of the smallest flying insects' bristled wings using lift-based stroke, dragbased stroke and clap-and-fling mechanism were evaluated.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Quick Estimates of Flight Fitness in Hovering Animals, Including Novel Mechanisms for Lift Production

TL;DR: In this article, the average lift coefficient, Reynolds number, the aerodynamic power, the moment of inertia of the wing mass and the dynamic efficiency in animals which perform normal hovering with horizontally beating wings are derived.
Journal ArticleDOI

Paddles and rakes: Fluid flow through bristled appendages of small organisms*

TL;DR: The results suggest that a simple change in size or speed of a bristled appendage can lead to a novel mode of functioning under some circumstances, whereas in other situations differences in morphology or behavior have little effect on performance.
Journal Article

The effects of environmental variation on a mechanism that controls insect body size

TL;DR: It is suggested that the differential sensitivity of the physiological processes that regulate body size may enable insects to adjust adult body size in response to simultaneous variation in multiple types of environmental stimuli.
Journal ArticleDOI

A quantitative analysis of the mechanism that controls body size in Manduca sexta

TL;DR: A quantitative description of the empirical data on body size determination that accurately predicts body size for diverse genetic strains is developed and shows that body size is fully determined by three fundamental parameters: the growth rate, thecritical weight, and the interval between the critical weight and the secretion of ecdysone.
Journal ArticleDOI

Atmospheric oxygen level and the evolution of insect body size.

TL;DR: A variety of recent empirical findings support a link between oxygen and insect size, and provide a wealth of plausible mechanisms by which tracheal oxygen delivery may be centrally involved in setting the relatively small size of insects and for hyperoxia-enabled Palaeozoic gigantism.
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