August 9, 2017

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How cicadas manage to 'wing it'

Credit: American Chemical Society
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Credit: American Chemical Society

Unlike locusts and many other flying insects, cicadas don't soar through the air with the greatest of ease. Now in a study appearing the ACS' The Journal of Physical Chemistry B, scientists report that certain chemical components in the insect's wings could explain why.

Although live most of their lives underground, billions of them eventually emerge on the surface in late spring, either annually or periodically in 13- to 17-year cycles. During their brief six-week lifecycle above ground, adult cicadas cling to nearby trees, generate shrill mating calls, reproduce and die. It was the sight of hundreds of dead cicadas on their household deck that inspired Terry Gullion and his son, John, a high school student, to investigate the exact chemical composition of cicada wings.

Using solid-state nuclear , the team found that the veins and membranes of cicada wings were composed of different proteins. They also detected differing ratios of protein to chitin—a strong, fibrous substance—in these structures. Driven by their curiosity, the Gullions then compared their cicada wing chemical profile to that found in locust wings reported in the literature. In that earlier study, scientists using a different method detected virtually no chitin in the locust membrane. The researchers say that this difference in chitin could help explain why cicada wings are relatively heavy compared to a locust's, and why cicadas can only fly short distances.

More information: John D. Gullion et al. Solid-State NMR Study of the Cicada Wing, The Journal of Physical Chemistry B (2017). DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcb.7b05598

Journal information: Journal of Physical Chemistry B

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