| Literature DB >> 32457065 |
Guanting Su1,2, Robert Dudley2,3, Tianyu Pan4, Mengzong Zheng1, Liansong Peng1, Qiushi Li1,5.
Abstract
Maximum whole-body force production can influence behavioral outcomes for volant taxa, and may also be relevant to aerodynamic optimization in microair vehicles. Here, we describe a new method for measuring maximum force production in free-flying animals, and present associated data for the wandering glider dragonfly. Flight trajectories were repeatedly acquired from pull-up responses by insects dropped in mid-air with submaximal loads attached beneath the center of body mass. Forces were estimated from calculations of the maximum time-averaged acceleration through time, and multiple estimates were obtained per individual so as to statistically facilitate approximation of maximum capacity through use of the Weibull distribution. On a group level, wandering glider dragonflies were here estimated to be capable of producing total aerodynamic force equal to ∼4.3 times their own body weight, a value which significantly exceeds earlier estimates made for load-lifting dragonflies, and also for other volant taxa in sustained vertical load-lifting experiments. Maximum force production varied isometrically with body mass. Falling and recovery flight with submaximal load represents a new context for evaluating limits to force production by flying animals.Entities:
Keywords: Allometry; Flight; Load lifting; Maximum performance; Trajectory kinematics
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32457065 DOI: 10.1242/jeb.218552
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Biol ISSN: 0022-0949 Impact factor: 3.312