A contribution to the knowledge of the odonata

Theories concerning the origin of insect wings and flight are reviewed and a new scenario for their origin proposed. It is suggested that environmental conditions of the small stream were responsible for the evolution of insect flight, and that thermoregulation as well as respiration was important i...

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Main Author: Carle, Frank Louis
Other Authors: Entomology
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/37497
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-03132009-040405/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-374972021-05-02T05:32:50Z A contribution to the knowledge of the odonata Carle, Frank Louis Entomology Turner, E. Craig Jr. Benfield, Ernest F. Kosztarab, Michael Eaton, John L. Voshell, J. Reese Jr. LD5655.V856 1982.C482 Odonata -- Virginia Theories concerning the origin of insect wings and flight are reviewed and a new scenario for their origin proposed. It is suggested that environmental conditions of the small stream were responsible for the evolution of insect flight, and that thermoregulation as well as respiration was important in the preadaptation of wings. The possibility that the five paired convex-concave vein systems each represented a dorsal-ventral blood channel is suggested. Odonate wing vein homology and nomenclatural systems, and phylogeny are reviewed. The process of vein loss is evaluated in the Palaeoptera and a new system of odonate wing vein homologies proposed. The odonate wing mechanism is analyzed and the heretofore overlooked discal nodus characterized. Reevaluation of the comparative morphology of fossil and recent Odonata indicates that Protozygoptera and Protanisoptera represent evolutionary side branches, that the Anisozygoptera is polyphyletic, and that Isophlebiidae and Calopterygoidea are the most generalized Odonata known. Previous scenarios explaining evolution of the unique odonate copulatory process are reviewed. Considering the copulatory behavior of the Calopterygoidea generalized supports evolutionary trends toward male domination and in-flight completion of the process. Assuming direct sperm transfer the original odonate mode requires that originally oviposition be in tandem and that sperm transfer to and from male anterior abdominal sterna be accidental. In contrast, assuming an original indirect transfer of sperm leads to a copulatory sequence similar to that of the Odonata. The proposed scenario differs from others in that extraordinary postures are not envisioned, the process is completed at rest, and the odonate tandem hold is developed prior to copulation. Anisopteran morphology and phylogeny are reviewed and reliable dentification keys developed for North American families and genera, and for 180 anisopteran species collected in Virginia and vicinity. Each species is described and photographed, including seven new species. The biogeography of Virginia Anisoptera is best explained by overlapping biotic regions, the fauna being a mixture of eastern North American, boreal, and tropical elements. New efficient methods for collecting, preserving, and rearing Odonata are described. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T21:10:05Z 2014-03-14T21:10:05Z 1982-06-16 2009-03-13 2009-03-13 2009-03-13 Dissertation Text etd-03132009-040405 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/37497 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-03132009-040405/ en OCLC# 08956025 LD5655.V856_1982.C482.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ xv, 1, 095 pages, 2 unnumbered leaves BTD application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic LD5655.V856 1982.C482
Odonata -- Virginia
spellingShingle LD5655.V856 1982.C482
Odonata -- Virginia
Carle, Frank Louis
A contribution to the knowledge of the odonata
description Theories concerning the origin of insect wings and flight are reviewed and a new scenario for their origin proposed. It is suggested that environmental conditions of the small stream were responsible for the evolution of insect flight, and that thermoregulation as well as respiration was important in the preadaptation of wings. The possibility that the five paired convex-concave vein systems each represented a dorsal-ventral blood channel is suggested. Odonate wing vein homology and nomenclatural systems, and phylogeny are reviewed. The process of vein loss is evaluated in the Palaeoptera and a new system of odonate wing vein homologies proposed. The odonate wing mechanism is analyzed and the heretofore overlooked discal nodus characterized. Reevaluation of the comparative morphology of fossil and recent Odonata indicates that Protozygoptera and Protanisoptera represent evolutionary side branches, that the Anisozygoptera is polyphyletic, and that Isophlebiidae and Calopterygoidea are the most generalized Odonata known. Previous scenarios explaining evolution of the unique odonate copulatory process are reviewed. Considering the copulatory behavior of the Calopterygoidea generalized supports evolutionary trends toward male domination and in-flight completion of the process. Assuming direct sperm transfer the original odonate mode requires that originally oviposition be in tandem and that sperm transfer to and from male anterior abdominal sterna be accidental. In contrast, assuming an original indirect transfer of sperm leads to a copulatory sequence similar to that of the Odonata. The proposed scenario differs from others in that extraordinary postures are not envisioned, the process is completed at rest, and the odonate tandem hold is developed prior to copulation. Anisopteran morphology and phylogeny are reviewed and reliable dentification keys developed for North American families and genera, and for 180 anisopteran species collected in Virginia and vicinity. Each species is described and photographed, including seven new species. The biogeography of Virginia Anisoptera is best explained by overlapping biotic regions, the fauna being a mixture of eastern North American, boreal, and tropical elements. New efficient methods for collecting, preserving, and rearing Odonata are described. === Ph. D.
author2 Entomology
author_facet Entomology
Carle, Frank Louis
author Carle, Frank Louis
author_sort Carle, Frank Louis
title A contribution to the knowledge of the odonata
title_short A contribution to the knowledge of the odonata
title_full A contribution to the knowledge of the odonata
title_fullStr A contribution to the knowledge of the odonata
title_full_unstemmed A contribution to the knowledge of the odonata
title_sort contribution to the knowledge of the odonata
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/37497
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-03132009-040405/
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