Issus (genus)

Issus
Issus species
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Hexapoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hemiptera
Suborder: Auchenorrhyncha
Infraorder: Fulgoromorpha
Family: Issidae
Genus: Issus
Fabricius, 1803

Issus is a genus of 'planthoppers' belonging to the family Issidae of infraorder Fulgoromorpha of suborder Auchenorrhyncha of order Hemiptera. Like most members of the order Hemiptera (popularly known as the "bug" or "true bugs" order) they live on phloem sap that they extract with their piercing, sucking mouth parts.

Planthoppers are the only animals known to possess a locomotive gear mechanism, and Issus coleoptratus is the first type of planthopper to have the mechanism formally described.[1][2][3] The gears in the insect legs however, have nothing to do with power ratios, but only with synchronising the action of the jumping legs.

Description

The genus Issus includes small insects generally flightless with a stocky body, a brown body and forewings with strong pronounced ribs. They feed on phloem. Species of this genus are present in most of Europe, in the Near East and in North Africa. They typically live on European climbing ivy.[4]

Gear mechanism

The gear mechanism of Issus coleoptratus

Planthoppers are the first animals found to contain a biological form of a mechanical gear, used in locomotion (crocodiles possess a heart valve with cog-like projections, but they have no cog-like function[5]), and the first formal description of this mechanism was in the species Issus coleoptratus; the gears keep the legs in synchronization, allowing the bugs to jump accurately at an acceleration of nearly 400 G's in two milliseconds.[1] The existence of the gears in planthoppers had been known for decades,[6] but zoologist Gregory Sutton and his co-authors only recently characterized their functional significance by doing high-speed photography of the animals at Cambridge University.[1][4][7] The gears are found only in the nymph forms of all planthoppers, and are lost during the final molt to the adult stage.[2] It is suspected that gears are lost in the adult after the last molt because if broken they would be irreparable, crippling the insect for life.[2] Prior to their discovery, it was assumed only humans had invented gears.[3]

List of species

This genus include the following 29 species:

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Burrows, Malcolm; Sutton, Gregory (2013-09-13), "Interacting gears synchronize propulsive leg movements in a jumping insect", Science 341 (6151): 1254–1256, doi:10.1126/science.1240284
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Jane J. Lee (2013-09-12), "Insects Use Gears in Hind Legs to Jump", National Geographic
  3. 3.0 3.1 "Gears evolved in nature long before humans 'invented' them", theguardian.com, 2013-09-13
  4. 4.0 4.1 Herkewitz, William (2013-09-12), "The First Gear Discovered in Nature", Popular Mechanics
  5. Axelsson, Michael; Franklin, Craig E.; Löfman, Carl O.; Nilsson, Stefan; Grigg, Gordon C. (1996), "Dynamic anatomical study of cardiac shunting in crocodiles using high-resolution angioscopy", The Journal of Experimental Biology 199: 359–65, PMID 9317958
  6. K. Sander. 1957. Bau und Funktion des Sprungapparates von Pyrilla perpusilla WALKER (Homoptera - Fulgoridae). Zool. Jb. Jena (Anat.) 75, 383–388
  7. Ellie Zolfagharifard (2013-09-12), "Nature outdoes engineers again: High-speed 'mechanical gears' discovered for the first time on the hind legs of a plant hopping insect", dailymail.co.uk

External links

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