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Today's Story
Today's most read story is:
Turning Earth Into Venus
 
Attack of the Giant Insects
Terrestrial Origins Summary (Aug 18, 2007): Researchers are using X-Ray images to understand why giant insects that lived on the Earth millions of years ago disappeared. The study is providing insight into how life on Earth and the planet’s climate interact.

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Attack of the Giant Insects

Based on a Argonne National Laboratory news release

X-ray Images Help Explain Limits to Insect Body Size

X-ray imaging of beetles helps confirm that tracheal system design may limit size in insects. More of the body is filled with air-filled tracheal tubes in larger species, particularly in the legs, and so much larger species than exist today might not have room for enough tubes.
Credit: Argonne National Laboratory
Researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy's Argonne National Laboratory have cast new light on why the giant insects that lived millions of years ago disappeared.

In the late Paleozoic Era, with atmospheric oxygen levels reaching record highs, some insects evolved into giants. When oxygen levels returned to lower levels, the insect giants went extinct. Now scientists are hoping to shed light on how this climatic change affected ancient life on Earth.

The basis of this gigantism is thought to lie in the insect respiratory system. In contrast to vertebrates, where blood transports oxygen from the lung to the cell, insects deliver oxygen directly through a network of blind-ending tracheal tubes. As insects get bigger, this type of oxygen transport becomes far less effective. But if the atmospheric oxygen levels increase, as they did in the late Paleozoic, then longer tracheal tubes can work. This would allow larger-sized insects - even giants - to evolve.

Recent research published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Science helps confirm the hypothesis that the tracheal system actually limits how big insects can be. The research provides a specific explanation for what limits size in beetles: the constriction leading to the legs.

A collaborative team of researchers from Argonne's Advanced Photon Source (APS), Midwestern University and Arizona State University wanted to study how beetles' tracheal systems change as their body sizes increase. The team took advantage of richly detailed X-ray images they produced at the APS to examine the dimensions of tracheal tubes in four beetle species, ranging in body mass by a factor of 1,000.

At the beginning of the Paleozoic era, multicellular animals underwent an ‘explosion’ in diversity known as the ‘Cambrian explosion’. This artist’s rendering, based on fossil evidence, of some of the bizarre life forms, now extinct, that emerged during this time.
Overall, they found that larger beetle species devote a disproportionately greater fraction of their body to tracheal tubes than do smaller species.

The team focused in particular on the passageways that lead from the body core to the head and to the legs. They reasoned that these orifices may be bottlenecks for tracheal tubes, limiting how much oxygen can be delivered to the extremities.

"We were surprised to find that the effect is most pronounced in the orifices leading to the legs, where more and more of the space is taken up by tracheal tubes in larger species," said Alex Kaiser, biologist at Midwestern University.

They then examined the tracheal measurements of the four species to see if they could predict the largest size of currently living beetles. The head data predicted an unrealistically large, foot-long beetle. In contrast, the leg data predicted a beetle that nicely matches the size of the largest living beetle, Titaneus giganteus.

Two of the most important events in the history of animal life occurred during the Paleozoic. First was the Cambrian explosion, where almost all living animal phyla known today appeared in just a few million years. Then, at the end of the Paleozoic, the largest mass extinction in history wiped out approximately 90 percent of all marine animal species.
Credit: UC Berkeley
"This study is a first step toward understanding what controls body size in insects. It's the legs that count in the beetles studied here, but what matters for the other hundreds of thousands of beetle species and millions of insect species overall is still an open question," said Jake Socha, Argonne biologist.

Funding for this work was supported by the National Science Foundation. Use of the APS was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences.


Related Web Sites

Agonizing Dino Deaths
Mammals Took Their Time
A Volcanic Dinosaur Debate
Our Earliest Animal Ancestors
The Oxygen Gap
The Cambrian's Many Forms

Note: Terrestrial Origins
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Saturday, August 18, 2007
 
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