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The Biomechanics of Insect Flight : Form, Function, Evolution

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From the rain forests of Borneo to the tenements of Manhattan, winged insects are a conspicuous and abundant feature of life on earth.

Here, Robert Dudley presents the first comprehensive explanation of how insects fly.

The author relates the biomechanics of flight to insect ecology and evolution in a major new work of synthesis.

The book begins with an overview of insect flight biomechanics.

Dudley explains insect morphology, wing motions, aerodynamics, flight energetics, and flight metabolism within a modern phylogenetic setting.

Drawing on biomechanical principles, he describes and evaluates flight behavior and the limits to flight performance.

The author, then, takes the next step by developing evolutionary explanations of insect flight.

He analyzes the origins of flight in insects, the roles of natural and sexual selection in determining how insects fly, and the relationship between flight and insect size, pollination, predation, dispersal, and migration.

Dudley ranges widely - from basic aerodynamics to muscle physiology and swarming behavior - but his focus is the explanation of functional design from evolutionary and ecological perspectives. The importance of flight in the lives of insects has long been recognized but never systematically evaluated.

This book addresses that shortcoming. Robert Dudley provides an introduction to insect flight that will be welcomed by students and researchers in biomechanics, entomology, evolution, ecology, and behavior.

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Product Details
Princeton University Press
0691094918 / 9780691094915
Paperback / softback
29/09/2002
United States
English
536 p., [6] p. of plates : ill. (some col.)
research & professional /academic/professional/technical Learn More
Reprint. Originally published: 2000.
This work is a remarkable accomplishment, something never before even attempted... Especially noteworthy are the remarkable way it combines biomechanical with ecological and evolutionary thinking and the extent to which it brings in non-English literatureA... It will have a long and useful life. -- Steven Vogel, Duke University, author of "Life in Moving Fluids: The Physical Biology of Flow" and "Life's Devices: The Physical World of Animals and Plants" This is an excellent book, without any serious competitors... Particularly impressive is the range of Robert Dudley's knowledge and understand
This work is a remarkable accomplishment, something never before even attempted... Especially noteworthy are the remarkable way it combines biomechanical with ecological and evolutionary thinking and the extent to which it brings in non-English literatureA... It will have a long and useful life. -- Steven Vogel, Duke University, author of "Life in Moving Fluids: The Physical Biology of Flow" and "Life's Devices: The Physical World of Animals and Plants" This is an excellent book, without any serious competitors... Particularly impressive is the range of Robert Dudley's knowledge and understand PSVD Animal physiology, PSVT7 Insects (entomology)