Leg regeneration stunts wing growth and hinders flight performance in a stick insect (Sipyloidea sipylus)

Major morphological structures are sometimes produced not once, but twice. For example, stick insects routinely shed legs to escape a predator or tangled moult, and these legs are subsequently re-grown. Here, I show that in Sipyloidea sipylus, re-growth of a leg during development causes adults to h...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the Royal Society. B, Biological sciences Biological sciences, 2006-07, Vol.273 (1595), p.1811-1814
1. Verfasser: Maginnis, T.L
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container_title Proceedings of the Royal Society. B, Biological sciences
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creator Maginnis, T.L
description Major morphological structures are sometimes produced not once, but twice. For example, stick insects routinely shed legs to escape a predator or tangled moult, and these legs are subsequently re-grown. Here, I show that in Sipyloidea sipylus, re-growth of a leg during development causes adults to have disproportionately smaller wings and increases wing loading. These morphological consequences of leg regeneration led to significant reductions in several biologically relevant measures of individual flight performance. This previously unrecognized tradeoff between legs and wings reveals the integrated nature of phasmid phenotypes, and I propose how this tradeoff may have shaped phasmid evolution.
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; Open Access: PubMed Central; MEDLINE
subjects Animals
Body Size
Evolution
Extremities - physiology
Flight
Flight, Animal - physiology
Insect flight
Insect morphology
Insecta - anatomy & histology
Insecta - growth & development
Insecta - physiology
Legs
Moles
Molting
Phasmatodea
Phenotypic traits
Regeneration
Sipyloidea sipylus
Stick Insects
Tradeoffs
Wing loading
Wings, Animal - growth & development
title Leg regeneration stunts wing growth and hinders flight performance in a stick insect (Sipyloidea sipylus)
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