The quest of insects to achieve total world domination is wing-powered.
Insects, the only invertebrates that have learned how to fly, use their wings as key assets in their global colonization. Their wings can be protective shells, musical instruments (grasshoppers), camouflage, signals to recognize each other, attract mates, warn predators, even tools to fly.
Insects are our greatest competitor for food. They also keep the earth clean and productive. These ecosystem workhorses could easily manage without us, but we could never manage with out them.
In celebration of these chitin-made wonders, we’ve collected images to take you on a tour of the insect wing world.
Above:
Flight of the Dragonfly
Dragonfly wings — stiff and heavily veined — represent an early kind of wing, entomologists believe. Wings probably began as protrusions of the insect body: lobes that gave extra gliding stability. Traveling along with those protrusions, came the insects circulatory system. Today those are the veins we see in the insect wings.
Image: Jon Garvin/Flickr.
Backlink: http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/wp-content/gallery/insect-wings/dragonfly.jpg