Date: November 3, 2015
Source: University of Georgia
Evidence
has been mounting that female monarch butterflies are better at flying and more
successful at migration than males, and researchers from the University of
Georgia have now come up with an explanation -- but not one they expected.
In
the study comparing physical traits of female and male monarchs, they found
that although female monarchs have smaller wings and smaller flight muscles
than males, their wings are thicker and also bear less weight per square inch,
making them both sturdier and more efficient in flight.
"Both
of these elements would play important roles in determining the outcome of the
migration," said the study's lead author Andy Davis, a research scientist
in UGA's Odum School of Ecology. "Until now, we had no idea why females were
better flyers than males, but this study definitely helps to answer that
question."
For
the study, published recently in the Journal of Insects, Davis and co-author
Michael Holden, an undergraduate ecology student, measured the wings and body
parts of 47 male and 45 female monarchs, specifically targeting those
characteristics that are important for flight, such as the ratio of wing size
to body size, the size of flight muscles and wing thickness.
"We
expected we'd find that females have bigger flight muscles, but it was the
opposite," said Holden, who will graduate in spring 2016 with a bachelor's
degree in ecology and will document moth species next year through an
internship in Costa Rica. "Males had the largest muscles."
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