Author:
Baek Minjung,Lawin Katherine M.,Codden Christina J.,Lim Hangkyo,Yang Eunjin,Kim Ho-Young,Lee Sang-im,Jablonski Piotr G.
Abstract
Abstract
Different species of water striders match leg speeds to their body sizes to maximize their jump take off velocity without breaking the water surface, which might have aided evolution of leg structures optimized for exploitation of the water surface tension. It is not understood how water striders achieve this match. Can individuals modify their leg movements based on their body mass and locomotor experience? Here we tested if water striders, Gerris latiabdominis, adjust jumping behaviour based on their personal experience and how an experimentally added body weight affects this process. Females, but not males, modified their jumping behaviour in weight-dependent manner, but only when they experienced frequent jumping. They did so within the environmental constraint set by the physics of water surface tension. Females’ ability to adjust jumping may represent their adaptation to frequent increases or decreases of the weight that they support as mating bouts, during which males ride on top of females, start or end, respectively. This suggests that natural selection for optimized biomechanics combined with sexual selection for mating adaptations shapes this ability to optimally exploit water surface tension, which might have aided adaptive radiation of Gerromorpha into a diversity of semiaquatic niches.
Funder
National Research Foundation of Korea
Start-up grant from DGIST
Brain Korea 21 Program
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
10 articles.
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