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Fly Far, Lift More? What Patterns Exist Within Interindividual Capacity of Flight Performance Traits in Bombus impatiens?

Locomotion is central to the survival of many animal species; however large variation in performance, for example in speed or endurance, exists between individuals within a species. Using the bumblebee species, Bombus impatiens, I studied the extent of the variation in several flight performance traits and how they are associated. I first addressed how bumblebee workers vary in foraging effort and observed that only around half of the monitored individuals underwent foraging activity. Additionally, significant variation in metabolic rate between foragers and non-foragers was uncovered. I further investigated if such variation could be associated with flight performance capacity, such as an individual’s ability to carry a load, their flight speed and distance traveled, their wing morphology and kinematics, and their flight metabolic rate. These traits are commonly measured to characterize flight capacity in insects, however the links between them have yet to be investigated. Links between morphology, wing kinematics and peak metabolic rate previously uncovered in the literature were observed in my analysis, although variation in their scaling with body mass was detected. Vertical force scaled isometrically with body mass but was not related to it when expressed in on a mass specific basis (VF m-1g-1, where m is gravitation acceleration). In regard to forward flight speed, body mass does have an affect, however it alone does not have a great degree of explanatory power and other factors such as morphology and wing kinematics are likely to play a greater part in its determination. Finally, maximum flight speed had a significant relationship with total flight time. Together, these results demonstrate that some links do exist between flight performance traits, however links are not present between all traits and certain flight performance traits should be treated as independent of each other.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:uottawa.ca/oai:ruor.uottawa.ca:10393/36831
Date January 2017
CreatorsShewchenko, Tera
ContributorsDarveau, Charles-Antoine
PublisherUniversité d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
Source SetsUniversité d’Ottawa
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
Formatapplication/pdf

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