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Nature’s Drone, Pretty and Deadly
New York Times ^ | April 1, 2013 | Natalie Angier

Posted on 04/03/2013 1:51:46 PM PDT by nickcarraway

African lions roar and strut and act the apex carnivore, but they’re lucky to catch 25 percent of the prey they pursue. Great white sharks have 300 slashing teeth and that ominous soundtrack, and still nearly half their hunts fail.

Dragonflies, by contrast, look dainty, glittery and fun, like a bubble bath or costume jewelry, and they’re often grouped with butterflies and ladybugs on the very short list of Insects People Like. Yet they are also voracious aerial predators, and new research suggests they may well be the most brutally effective hunters in the animal kingdom.

When setting off to feed on other flying insects, dragonflies manage to snatch their targets in midair more than 95 percent of the time, often wolfishly consuming the fresh meat on the spur without bothering to alight. “They’ll tear up the prey and mash it into a glob, munch, munch, munch,” said Michael L. May, an emeritus professor of entomology at Rutgers. “It almost looks like a wad of snuff in the mouth before they swallow it.”

Next step: grab more food. Dragonflies may be bantam, but their appetite is bottomless. Stacey Combes, who studies the biomechanics of dragonfly flight at Harvard, once watched a laboratory dragonfly eat 30 flies in a row. “It would have happily kept eating,” she said, “if there had been more food available.”

In a string of recent papers, scientists have pinpointed key features of the dragonfly’s brain, eyes and wings that allow it to hunt so unerringly. One research team has determined that the nervous system of a dragonfly displays an almost human capacity for selective attention, able to focus on a single prey as it flies amid a cloud of similarly fluttering insects, just as a guest at a party can attend to a friend’s words while

(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...


TOPICS: Outdoors; Pets/Animals; Science
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 04/03/2013 1:51:46 PM PDT by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway

Is this an attempt by the New York Slimes to somehow justify Obama’s drones against Americans?


2 posted on 04/03/2013 1:54:56 PM PDT by Jyotishi (Seeking the truth, a fact at a time.)
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To: nickcarraway
My kid brother and I have fond memories of a piece of Minnesota farmland my father brought and made us spend summers clearing, piling rocks, draining and fencing.

The mosquitoes would come at us in swarms and the dragon flies wouldn't be far behind . . . feeding on the insects that were feeding on us. It was like the cavalry coming to the rescue.

Dad later sold that farmland to help us pay for college. Our efforts had turned that 80 acres from maybe 50% tillable to 85 or 90% tillable.

3 posted on 04/03/2013 1:58:56 PM PDT by Vigilanteman (Obama: Fake black man. Fake Messiah. Fake American. How many fakes can you fit in one Zer0?)
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To: nickcarraway

Mosquito hawks


4 posted on 04/03/2013 2:05:25 PM PDT by BBell (And Now for Something Completely Different)
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To: Vigilanteman

Ever notice when they showed up the skeeters left?


5 posted on 04/03/2013 2:11:32 PM PDT by crz
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To: nickcarraway
“They’ll tear up the prey and mash it into a glob, munch, munch, munch,” said Michael L. May, an emeritus professor

This is what passes for a Professor?!

6 posted on 04/03/2013 2:30:20 PM PDT by American in Israel (A wise man's heart directs him to the right, but the foolish mans heart directs him toward the left.)
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To: crz

We certainly noticed the skeeters thinned out. But keep in mind these were Minnesota skeeters, so they never completely left.


7 posted on 04/03/2013 7:32:28 PM PDT by Vigilanteman (Obama: Fake black man. Fake Messiah. Fake American. How many fakes can you fit in one Zer0?)
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