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Skydiving ants

 
 
grant
15:21 / 10.02.05
Check it out -- a Berkeley/UF researcher poking around the Amazon jungle found the world's first gliding insects -- 25 species of ants in five different genera.

Before this, the most "primitive" organism known for wingless flight was a snake.

"Steve's first observation may be leading to a whole Pandora's Box of gliding arthropods," added Kaspari. "Steve, Robert and I right now are exploring how pervasive such directed descent might be — we are, in fact, finding it in a variety of wingless arthropods that glide in using a variety of techniques. Plummeting to the earth may be the exception, not the rule."

The biomechanics are pretty cool -- the little suckers can do 180-degree turns as they're falling. They've got video of it at the link.

And this *may* help explain how flight evolved in the first place.
 
 
Cheap. Easy. Cruel.
18:37 / 11.02.05
That is pretty cool! I don't know if I would call that gliding though. It is similar to the maneuvers I perform in freefall while skydiving.
 
  
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