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Friday, August 5, 2011

Due to a 'lack of oxygen' millions of years ago Gigantic flying insects have died


The emergence and decline of gigantic flying insects millions of years ago may have been linked to the amount of oxygen available to their water-breathing young, according to a study.

Scientists studying the smaller modern-day descendants of the huge creatures, which included dragonflies with wingspans of almost a metre, believe they have solved a question which has puzzled experts for more than 100 years by looking at their larvae, which live in water.

They believe that larvae 300million years ago took advantage of the higher oxygen levels available, using it to help fuel their growth to the size shown in fossilised remains found by palaeontologists today.
Gigantic insects including a dragonfly with a wingspan of 75cm died out millions of years ago due to a lack of oxygen which had made them giant in the first place

Gigantic insects including a dragonfly with a wingspan of 75cm died out millions of years ago due to a lack of oxygen which had made them giant in the first place

When the climate later changed and the oxygen level dropped, the larger species' larvae could not take in enough of the gas to survive and the species went extinct, leaving only their smaller relatives alive.

Dr David Bilton, of Plymouth University's School of Marine Science and Engineering, who carried out the research, said: 'In prehistoric times, higher levels of oxygen may have favoured the evolution of giant insects largely through their effects on larvae, and it is perhaps no accident that many extinct giants had aquatic juvenile stages.'

In their paper, published in the Public Library of Science, Dr Bilton and co-author Dr Wilco Verberk show that aquatic insect larvae are more sensitive to fluctuations in oxygen levels than the air-breathing land-based adults.

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