Date: 12/06/2012 11:17:46
From: neomyrtus_
ID: 163831
Subject: how to shrink and insect - the power of predation

http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2012/05/25/1204026109.abstract?sid=4018399d-fda9-43e4-b280-752d1752d784

Environmental and biotic controls on the evolutionary history of insect body size

Matthew E. Clapham1 and Jered A. Karr

+ Author Affiliations

Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, University of California, Santa Cruz, CA 95064 Edited by James H. Brown, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM, and approved April 27, 2012 (received for review March 7, 2012)

Abstract

Giant insects, with wingspans as large as 70 cm, ruled the Carboniferous and Permian skies. Gigantism has been linked to hyperoxic conditions because oxygen concentration is a key physiological control on body size, particularly in groups like flying insects that have high metabolic oxygen demands. Here we show, using a dataset of more than 10,500 fossil insect wing lengths, that size tracked atmospheric oxygen concentrations only for the first 150 Myr of insect evolution. The data are best explained by a model relating maximum size to atmospheric environmental oxygen concentration (pO2) until the end of the Jurassic, and then at constant sizes, independent of oxygen fluctuations, during the Cretaceous and, at a smaller size, the Cenozoic. Maximum insect size decreased even as atmospheric pO2 rose in the Early Cretaceous following the evolution and radiation of early birds, particularly as birds acquired adaptations that allowed more agile flight. A further decrease in maximum size during the Cenozoic may relate to the evolution of bats, the Cretaceous mass extinction, or further specialization of flying birds. The decoupling of insect size and atmospheric pO2 coincident with the radiation of birds suggests that biotic interactions, such as predation and competition, superseded oxygen as the most important constraint on maximum body size of the largest insects.

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Date: 12/06/2012 11:18:30
From: neomyrtus_
ID: 163832
Subject: re: how to shrink and insect - the power of predation

be awesome if we could edit thread titles, hey?

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Date: 12/06/2012 11:47:21
From: Geoff D
ID: 163835
Subject: re: how to shrink and insect - the power of predation

neomyrtus_ said:


be awesome if we could edit thread titles, hey?

Yeah!

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Date: 12/06/2012 12:28:16
From: poikilotherm
ID: 163837
Subject: re: how to shrink and insect - the power of predation

Geoff D said:


neomyrtus_ said:

be awesome if we could edit thread titles, hey?

Yeah!

LOL

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Date: 12/06/2012 12:32:52
From: morrie
ID: 163838
Subject: re: how to shrink and insect - the power of predation

Have you got the full article, neomyrtus? Is there a nice graph showing the oxygen variations and the insect size data? For $10, I m tempted to purchase the paper, but I otten find such purchases disappointing.

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Date: 12/06/2012 14:05:01
From: Bubble Car
ID: 163844
Subject: re: how to shrink and insect - the power of predation

So presumably predation by pterosaurs had less influence.

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