Two different jumping mechanisms of water striders are determined by body size

Author:

Kim Woojoo1ORCID,Amauger Juliette2,Ha Jungmoon1,Pham Thai Hong34,Tran Anh Duc5ORCID,Lee Jae Hong6ORCID,Park Jinseok1,Jablonski Piotr G.17,Kim Ho-Young68ORCID,Lee Sang-im910

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Behavioral Ecology and Evolution, School of Biological Sciences, Seoul National University, Seoul 08826, Korea

2. Laboratoire d’Hydrodynamique de l’X (LadHyX), UMR CNRS 7646, École Polytechnique, 91128 Palaiseau Cedex, France

3. Mientrung Institute for Scientific Research, Vietnam National Museum of Nature, Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology, 49000 Hue, Vietnam

4. Graduate University of Science and Technology, Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology, 100000 Hanoi, Vietnam

5. Department of Applied Zoology, Faculty of Biology, University of Science, Vietnam National University, 11414 Hanoi, Vietnam

6. Department of Mechanical Engineering, Seoul National University, Seoul 08826, Korea

7. Museum and Institute of Zoology, Polish Academy of Sciences, 00-679 Warsaw, Poland

8. Institute of Advanced Machines and Design, Seoul National University, Seoul 08826, Korea

9. Laboratory of Integrative Animal Ecology, Department of New Biology, Daegu Gyeongbuk Institute of Science & Technology, Daegu 42988, Korea

10. New Biology Research Center, Daegu Gyeongbuk Institute of Science & Technology, Daegu 42988, Korea

Abstract

Current theory for surface tension-dominant jumps on water, created for small- and medium-sized water strider species and used in bioinspired engineering, predicts that jumping individuals are able to match their downward leg movement speed to their size and morphology such that they maximize the takeoff speed and minimize the takeoff delay without breaking the water surface. Here, we use empirical observations and theoretical modeling to show that large species (heavier than ~80 mg) could theoretically perform the surface-dominated jumps according to the existing model, but they do not conform to its predictions, and switch to using surface-breaking jumps in order to achieve jumping performance sufficient for evading attacks from underwater predators. This illustrates how natural selection for avoiding predators may break the theoretical scaling relationship between prey size and its jumping performance within one physical mechanism, leading to an evolutionary shift to another mechanism that provides protection from attacking predators. Hence, the results are consistent with a general idea: Natural selection for the maintenance of adaptive function of a specific behavior performed within environmental physical constraints leads to size-specific shift to behaviors that use a new physical mechanism that secure the adaptive function.

Funder

Seoul National University

National Research Foundation of Korea

Ministry of Science and ICT, South Korea

Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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