I always enjoy surprise
observations missed by everyone. It is
what makes mineral exploration in particular so much fun. In this case, lab protocol acted to make
everyone blind.
What it means is that a whole
range of ordinary insects evolved colorful display patterning in the same
manner as butterflies and for the same apparent reasons. An obvious benefit is that it will be the
first stop in determining identity of a species.
I am sure we will now soon see plenty
of pictures of these new patterns once the protocol is thought out.
Hidden in Plain Sight: 'Fairy' Insect Wings Discovered
By Stephanie Pappas,
LiveScience Senior Writer
posted: 13 January 2011 07:50 am ET
A female Closterocerus coffeellae, a fly collected in Colombia , looks drab against a
white background and shines against black. Credit: E. Shevtsova/J. Kjaerandsen
Tiny wasps and flies look bland at first glance — like any drab brown
insect you'd swat away without a second thought. But a closer look reveals a
dazzling secret: Colorful wings that have gone unnoticed by scientists for
decades.
Researchers at Lund University in Sweden have discovered that the
insect species – hymenoptera wasps and diptera flies – they've been studying
for decades reflect light off their wings in rainbow-like patterns. The effect
is a bit like oil on water, but these patterns are permanent, suggesting they
may play a role in insect
communication.
Scientists in the mid-1800s noticed these patterns, but shrugged them
off as random and fleeting. Contemporary scientists have missed the colors
entirely, Jostein Kjaerandsen, a researcher in the Museum
of Zoology at Lund University ,
told LiveScience.
That's because lab techniques make the colors all but invisible, said Lund doctoral candidate
Ekaterina Shevtsova, who first noticed the colors. "In the lab and under
the microscope, we have long established traditions of viewing such small wings
against a bright white background, soaked in alcohol or embedded in an oily
medium on a slide," Shevtsova said. [Image
of fly against white and black backgrounds]
To see the colors, she said, you have to view a living or dried-out
wing against a dark background.
Kjaerandsen, Shevtsova and their colleagues published the results
online Jan. 3 in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy
of Sciences.
Hidden beauty
Shevtsova noticed the patterns one day while working with insect
specimens for her doctoral thesis.
"It's not easy to explain, because you observe many specimens
every day under the microscope and you don't see it," Shevtsova wrote in
an e-mail to LiveScience. "And one day you handle a specimen, which you
may very well [have] seen before, and suddenly you notice the wing
pattern, which is beautiful and perfect, like an art painting."
Shevtsova could tell the pattern wasn't random or chaotic, she said,
and a check of other specimens showed that the patterns seemed stable within
species.
"Ever since you saw it, you can't stop seeing it," she said.
"It is just not possible to ignore."
She shared her discovery with Kjaerandsen, who was
"flabbergasted," he said.
"It was like the world I knew suddenly was turned upside down and
a totally new character system was sparkling from every wing of the flies I had
been working with for years without really noticing," Kjaerandsen wrote to
LiveScience.
Colorful courtship?
The wings of the flies and wasps are transparent, but they reflect
about 20 percent of the light that hits them, the researchers found. It's this
light that creates the shining patterns, just like a thin film of soap or oil
on water creates a
rainbow-colored glare.
Insects see color differently than humans, so the patterns likely look
different to them, Kjaerandsen said. Patterns are similar within species and
vary between species, suggesting that evolution may play a role in the
artistry.
"We find it hard to believe that insects walk and fly around with
wings that can be turned on to large (to them) flashing billboards without
evolution picking up on it," Kjaerandsen said. "We think they are
often used for communication between males
and females of the same species, especially since many small flies and
wasps are known to display or flash wings to each other during courtship."
The wasps and flies aren't the only everyday insects hiding beauty in
plain sight. The common fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, has jewel-like
wings as well, the researchers found. So do a variety of winged bugs in Costa
Rican rainforests.
There is one notable exception to the rule, Kjaerandsen said: moths.
When the researchers brushed the colored hairs and scales off moth wings, they
found colorless wings beneath. That suggests that color patterns don't evolve
without evolutionary pressure, Kjaerandsen said.
The next step, the researchers say, is to find out more about how
insects display their wings in the wild. They also hope to learn whether
evolution drives changes in the color patterns. Hidden signals such as colorful
wings can also give researchers clues to the evolutionary relationships between
species, Kjaerandsen said.
The study is an example of old-fashioned science yielding new information,
Kjaerandsen added.
"These days, when we more and more study biological diversity
split down to molecules, traditional morphological studies like this one are on
the verge of disappearing from our universities – despite the fact that a major
proportion of these tiny sparkling jewels are still unknown to science,"
he said.
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