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1 May 2005 Age-Related Changes in Flight Muscle Mass, Lipid Reserves and Flight Capacity during Adult Maturation in Males of the Territorial Damselfly Calopteryx atrata (Odonata: Calopterygidae)
Kazuya Matsubara, Sumio Tojo, Nobuhiko Suzuki
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Abstract

In the territorial damselfly Calopteryx atrata Selys, length of the hindwing, the wing areas and the aspect ratio did not differ significantly among age classes during the pre-reproductive period, while the body mass of males increased about 2.5 times. This is due primarily to increase in mass of thorax and abdomen. The flight muscle mass accounted for the great part of the thorax mass, and began to increase from early in the pre-reproductive period and continued increasing until sexual maturation. The average flight muscle mass of sexually matured males was about 2.4 times of that of the youngest immature ones. On the other hand, the abdomen mass and total lipids increased remarkably in the latter half of the pre-reproductive period. The average total lipid content of mature males was about tenfold of that of the youngest immature ones. The maximum lift production per flesh body mass was positively correlated with the flight muscle mass and total lipid content. Such an increase in flight muscle mass and lipid reserves resulted in the increase of maximum lift force, and probably enhanced flight performance.

Kazuya Matsubara, Sumio Tojo, and Nobuhiko Suzuki "Age-Related Changes in Flight Muscle Mass, Lipid Reserves and Flight Capacity during Adult Maturation in Males of the Territorial Damselfly Calopteryx atrata (Odonata: Calopterygidae)," Zoological Science 22(5), 587-592, (1 May 2005). https://doi.org/10.2108/zsj.22.587
Received: 5 October 2004; Accepted: 1 March 2005; Published: 1 May 2005
KEYWORDS
adult maturation
flight capacity
flight muscle
lipid reserves
Odonata
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