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Results tagged “flies” from NatGeo News Watch

A fly that buzzed around during the time of dinosaurs is being described as a new family, genus and species of fly never before observed.

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This artist's rendering of a 100-million-year old insect shows the unusual horn on its head topped by three eyes.

Image by George Poinar/Courtesy OSU

"A single, incredibly well-preserved specimen of the tiny but scary-looking fly was preserved for eternity in Burmese amber, and it had a small horn emerging from the top of its head, topped by three eyes that would have given it the ability to see predators coming," Oregon State University said in a statement about the discovery.

"No other insect ever discovered has a horn like that, and there's no animal at all with a horn that has eyes on top," said George Poinar, Jr., a professor of zoology at OSU, who announced the new species in the journal Cretaceous Research.

"It was probably a docile little creature that fed on the pollen and nectar of tiny tropical flowers," Poinar said. "But it was really bizarre looking. One of the reviewers of the study called it a monster, and I have to admit it had a face only another fly could have loved. I was thinking of making some masks based on it for Halloween."

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This ancient "unicorn" fly that lived 100 million years ago in Burma has a "horn" in the center of its forehead, capped with three small eyes.

Photo by George Poinar/Courtesy OSU

The fly lived in the jungles of Myanmar and was found trapped in amber that was from 97 to 110 million years old, OSU said. "The gooey, viscous tree sap that flowed down over the fly and later turned to stone preserved its features in lifelike detail, including its strange horn topped by three functional eyes."

Strange evolutionary adaptations

"If we had seen nothing but the wings of this insect, it would have looked similar to some other flies in the family Bibionomorpha," Poinar said. "But this was near the end of the Early Cretacous when a lot of strange evolutionary adaptations were going on. Its specialized horn and eyes must have given this insect an advantage on very tiny flowers, but didn't serve as well when larger flowers evolved. So it went extinct."

Poinar named the new fly Cascoplecia insolitis--from the Latin "cascus" for old and "insolates" for strange and unusual.

The fly also had other very unusual characteristics, the study found, such as an odd-shaped antenna, unusually long legs that would have helped it crawl over flowers and extremely small vestigial mandibles that would have limited it to nibbling on very tiny particles of food.

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This image of an ancient fly in amber more closely shows the strange horn on its head, topped by three eyes.

Photo by George Poinar/Courtesy OSU

Pollen grains found on the legs of the fly suggest that it primarily must have fed on flowers.

"This fly lived during the time of the dinosaurs, but also in a period when Triassic and Jurassic species were becoming extinct, modern groups were appearing and angiosperms, or flowering plants, were diversifying. Some of the characteristics of the fly were common to other families found around that time, but others were extremely different--especially the horn with eyes on top," OSU said.

The specimen found in amber was well-preserved, lacking only the rear left portion of the abdomen and a portion of the left hind leg. It's rare to find specimens with essentially a complete body as well as wings, scientists noted in the report.

The fossil came from an amber mine in the Hukawng Valley of Myanmar, first excavated in 2001.

"This 'unicorn' fly was one of the oddities of the Cretaceous world and was obviously an evolutionary dead end."

Poinar is an expert on insects and other life forms that have been preserved in amber, and has used them as clues to create detailed portraits of ancient ecosystems.

"None of the specialized body characters of Cascoplecia occurs on previously reported Cretaceous bibionids," the report concluded. "This 'unicorn' fly was one of the oddities of the Cretaceous world and was obviously an evolutionary dead end."

Video: Beware the botfly

Posted on September 22, 2009 | 0 Comments

By James G. Robertson, National Geographic Digital Media

A New York Times story yesterday brought this video to our attention, which we found both fascinating and disturbing.

Wildlife filmmaker Vanessa Serrao returned from Belize with a special souvenir after she was bit on the head by a mosquito carrying a botfly egg, according to reporting by the Times.  As a wildlife filmmaker, she took the opportunity to film her husband removing the larva from her scalp.  The resulting video has been viewed more than 200,000 times on YouTube, not including the video on her own Web site.

Serrano says in the video that the botfly uses a process called phoresy to reproduce.  The botfly lays eggs on a mosquito, which hatch when near the body heat of a potential host.  The larva drops off the mosquito, burrows under the host's skin and feeds there for about a month before tunneling out again and transforming into an adult botfly.

Watch the video...if you dare!

German scientists have built a flight simulator for flies to better understand how the insects see and coordinate their movements. What they learn might be of use in developing robots that can move around their environment.

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Photo courtesy USDA

"A fly's brain enables the unbelievable--the animal's easy negotiation of obstacles in rapid flight, split-second reaction to the hand that would catch it, and unerring navigation to the smelly delicacies it lives on," says Technische Universität München in a statement about the research.

"Researchers have long known that flies take in many more images per second than humans do. For human eyes, anything more than 25 discrete images per second will merge into a continuous movement. A blowfly, on the other hand, can perceive 100 images per second as discrete sense impressions and interpret them quickly enough to steer its movement and precisely determine its position in space.

"Yet the fly's brain is hardly bigger than a pinhead, too small by far to enable the fly's feats if it functioned exactly the way the human brain does.

"It must have a simpler and more efficient way of processing images from the eyes into visual perception, and that is a subject of intense interest for robot builders," TUM says.

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Photo courtesy USDA

Robots have great difficulty perceiving their surroundings through their cameras, and even more difficulty making sense of what they see, TUM adds.

"Even the recognition of obstacles in their own work space takes too long. So people still need to protect their automated helpers, for example, by surrounding them with safety enclosures."

A more direct, supportive collaboration between human and machine is a central research goal of the "excellence cluster" named CoTeSys, Cognition for Technical Systems, a collaboration of about a hundred scientists and engineers from five universities and institutes in the Munich area of Germany.

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To understand how flies see and process their coordination, the CoTeSys group built a flight simulator for flies.

"Here they're investigating what goes on in flies' brains while they're flying. Their goal is to put similar capabilities in human hands--for example, to aid in developing robots that can independently apprehend and learn from their surroundings," TUM says.

Photo by David Braun

On a wraparound display, the researchers present diverse patterns, movements, and sensory stimuli to blowflies. The insect is held in place by a halter, so that electrodes can register the reactions of its brain cells, enabling the researchers to observe and analyze what happens in a fly's brain when the animal whizzes in criss-cross flight around a room, TUM says.

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Moving pictures displayed here simulate flight for an immobilized fly; electrodes give researchers a window into the fly's neural activity and vision processing.

Photo courtesy Max Planck Institute for Neurobiology

The first results show one thing very clearly: The way flies process the images from their immobile eyes is completely different from they way the human brain processes visual signals, the university adds.

"Movements in space produce so-called 'optical flux fields' that characterize specific kinds of motion definitively.

"In forward motion, for example, objects rush past on the sides, and foreground objects appear to get bigger. Near and distant objects appear to move differently.

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"The first step for the fly is to construct a model of these movements in its tiny brain. The speed and direction with which objects before the fly's eyes appear to move generate, moment by moment, a typical pattern of motion vectors, the flux field, which in a second step is assessed by the so-called "lobula plate," a higher level of the brain's vision center.

"In each hemisphere there are only 60 nerve cells responsible for this; each reacts with particular intensity when presented with the pattern appropriate to it.

"For the analysis of the optical flux fields, it's important that motion information from both eyes be brought together. This happens over a direct connection of specialized neurons called VS cells. In this way, the fly gets a precise fix on its position and movement."

Image courtesy Max Planck Institute for Neurobiology

"Through our results, the network of VS cells in the fly's brain responsible for rotational movement is one of the best understood circuits in the nervous system," explains Alexander Borst, a neurobiologist from the Max Planck Institute for Neurobiology.

The discoveries of the neuroscientists are also particularly interesting to guidance and control engineers at Technischen Universität München, who also collaborate in CoTeSys.

Under the leadership of Martin Buss and Kolja Kühnlenz, the TUM researchers are working to develop intelligent machines that can observe their environment through cameras, learn from what they see, and react appropriately to the current situation, the university explained.

"Their long-range aim is to enable the creation of intelligent machines that can interact with people directly, effectively, and safely. Even in factories, the safety barriers between humans and robots should fall. To that end, simple, fast, and efficient methods for the analysis and interpretation of camera pictures are absolutely essential."

TUM researchers are developing small, flying robots whose position and movement in flight will be controlled by a computer system for visual analysis inspired by the example of the fly's brain, the university said.

Robot Asks for Directions

Antoher TUM-built mobile robot, the Autonomous City Explorer (ACE), was challenged to find its way from the institute to Marienplatz at the heart of Munich--a distance of about a mile--by stopping passers-by and asking for directions. To do this, ACE had to interpret the gestures of people who pointed the way, and it had to negotiate the sidewalks and traffic crossings safely, TUM said.

"Increasingly natural interaction between intelligent machines and humans is unthinkable without efficient image analysis. Insights gained from the flight simulator for flies--through the scientific interplay CoTeSys fosters among researchers from various disciplines--offer an approach that might be simple enough to be technically portable from one domain to the other, from the insects to the robots."

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Navigating only by asking pedestrians it encountered for directions, the robot called ACE, or Autonomous City Explorer, made its way from the institute where it was built--at TUM, the Technische Universitaet Muenchen--to Marienplatz roughly a mile away. A project of the Munich-based CoTeSys collaboration, ACE is part of a larger effort to enable more natural, effective, and safe interaction between machines and people.

Photo courtesy LSR/TUM

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