The effect of leg length on jumping performance of short- and long-legged leafhopper insects

Author:

Burrows M.1,Sutton G. P.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 3EJ,UK

Abstract

SUMMARYTo assess the effect of leg length on jumping ability in small insects, the jumping movements and performance of a sub-family of leafhopper insects(Hemiptera, Auchenorrhyncha, Cicadellidae, Ulopinae) with short hind legs were analysed and compared with other long-legged cicadellids (Hemiptera,Auchenorrhyncha, Cicadellidae). Two species with the same jumping characteristics but distinctively different body shapes were analysed: Ulopa, which had an average body length of 3 mm and was squat, and Cephalelus, which had an average body length of 13 mm with an elongated body and head. In both, the hind legs were only 1.4 times longer than the front legs compared with 1.9–2.3 times in other cicadellid leafhoppers. When the length of the hind legs was normalised relative to the cube root of their body mass, their hind legs had a value of 1–1.1 compared with 1.6–2.3 in other cicadellids. The hind legs of Cephalelus were only 20% of the body length. The propulsion for a jump was delivered by rapid and synchronous rotation of the hind legs about their coxo-trochanteral joints in a three-phase movement, as revealed by high-speed sequences of images captured at rates of 5000 s–1. The hind tarsi were initially placed outside the lateral margins of the body and not apposed to each other beneath the body as in long-legged leafhoppers. The hind legs were accelerated in 1.5 ms (Ulopa) and 2 ms(Cephalelus) and thus more quickly than in the long-legged cicadellids. In their best jumps these movements propelled Ulopa to a take-off velocity of 2.3 m s–1 and Cephalelus to 2 m s–1, which matches that of the long-legged cicadellids. Both short-legged species had the same mean take-off angle of 56° but Cephalelus adopted a lower angle of the body relative to the ground(mean 15°) than Ulopa (mean 56°). Once airborne, Cephalelus pitched slowly and rolled quickly about its long axis and Ulopa rotated quickly about both axes. To achieve their best performances Ulopa expended 7 μJ of energy, generated a power output of 7 mW, and exerted a force of 6 mN; Cephalelus expended 23μJ of energy, generated a power output of 12 mW and exerted a force of 11 mN. There was no correlation between leg length and take-off velocity in the long- and short-legged species, but longer legged leafhoppers had longer take-off times and generated lower ground reaction forces than short-legged leafhoppers, possibly allowing the longer legged leafhoppers to jump from less stiff substrates.

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Insect Science,Molecular Biology,Animal Science and Zoology,Aquatic Science,Physiology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference21 articles.

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3. Bennet-Clark, H. C. (1990). Jumping in Orthoptera. In Biology of Grasshoppers (ed. R. F. Chapman and A. Joern), pp. 173-203. New York: John Wiley and Sons.

4. Bennet-Clark, H. C. and Alder, G. M. (1979). The effect of air resistance on the jumping performance of insects. J. Exp. Biol.82,105-121.

5. Brackenbury, J. (1996). Targetting and visuomotor space in the leaf-hopper Empoasca vitis (Gothe)(Hemiptera: Cicadellidae). J. Exp. Biol.199,731-740.

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