A number of animals have evolved aerial locomotion, either
by flight or by gliding. Flight has evolved at least four times, in the
insects, birds, pterosaurs and bats, while gliding has evolved mostly among
rainforest animals, especially in Asia’s
rainforests where the trees are tall and widely spaced. Here is our list of top
10 most unusual flying and gliding animal creatures:
1. Gliding Ants
Gliding ants are arboreal ants that have abilities of
controling the direction of their descent and returning to their home tree
trunk when they fall from branches, using visual cues to locate the trunk. They
are first discovered by the insect ecologist Stephen P. Yanoviak. Some
researches have shown that the gliding ants have an 85% chance of landing
successfully on the same tree, as compared to 5% if they were simply
parachuting like normal ants.
2. Flying Phalangers
For those who don’t know, the phalangers are apparently an
Australian subfamily of possum. Flying phalangers are small (about 400 mm,
counting the tail) and have folds of loose skin which help them to glide from
tree to tree by jumping and holding out their limbs spread-eagle. They also
have flat tails which that they use as rudders while gliding. They are able to
glide through the air for up to 140 meters. The most famous flying phalanger is
the sugar glider.
3. Flying Lemurs
Philippine Flying Lemur |
Sunda Flying Lemur |
4. Flying Snakes
The flying snake is a species of snake that can be found in Southeast Asia, India,
southernmost China and Sri Lanka.
Although the flying snakes are mildly venomous, they are considered harmless
because their poison is not dangerous to humans. Flying snakes can’t really fly
since they can’t actually gain altitude. They are gliders that use the speed of
the fall and contortions of their bodies to catch the air and generate lift.
Before the take-off, a flying snake will dangle on the end of a branch in a J
shape. It propels itself from the branch with the lower half of its body, forms
her body quickly into an S shape, and flattens to about twice its normal width,
giving its body a concave C shape, which can trap air. The snake can make turns
by undulating back and forth.
5. Flying Lizards
There are around 30 species of lizard of the genus Draco
(also known as Flying Dragons) found in Sri Lanka,
India, and Southeast
Asia. These lizards can glide for over 60 m and over this distance
they lose 10 m in height, which is quite some distance, since one of these
lizards is only around 20 cm long. The flying lizards have ability to extend
the ribs and their connecting membrane in order to create a wing. They also
have flattened and wing-like hindlimbs, and a small set of flaps on their neck
that serve them as a horizontal stabilizer. These lizards live in trees but
nest on the forest floor and only time a flying lizard ventures to the ground
is when a female is ready to lay her eggs.
6. Flying squirrels
Southern Flying Squirrel |
Northern Flying Squirrel |
7. Flying Frogs
Wallace's Flying Frog |
8. Flying Fish
There are around 60 species of flying fish belonging to the
family Exocoetidae that live in the oceans. The flying fish have unusually large
pectoral fins that enable them to escape from predators by leaping out of the
water and taking short gliding flights through air above the water’s surface.
To glide upward out of the water, the fish moves its tail more than 70 times
per second. In 2008, a Japanese television crew recorded the longest series of
glides of a flying fish that spent 45 seconds in the air, with only
periodically dipping its tail in the water. It’s been suggested that the flying
fish is on an evolutionary borderline between gliding and flight.
9. Flying Squid
In 2004, a group of scientists wrote a study, in the Journal
of Molluscan Studies, in which they collected sightings of at least six
distinct species of squid that squirt themselves out of the ocean and over the
waves. According to the scientists, a term “gliding” is too passive to describe
what these squids do when they leave the ocean for the air – “flight” is more
fitting. The aerodynamic benefit a flying squid derives from its flapping fins
and spiraled tentacles is not clear, but some scientists believe these
behaviors provide extra lift and help stabilize the squid when out of the
water.
10. Gliding Spiders
Ballooning is a term used for the mechanical kiting that
most species of small spiders use to travel through the air. When a young
spider grow strong enough to leave its mother, it hold a short length of silk
and wait for the wind. When there is the wind, because of the spider’s light
weight, the wind carry it to the sky as someone holding a big balloon in air.
The highest record of animals in the sky is not the flying bird nor the flying
insect. It is the ballooning spider.
Source : http://badcontrol.net
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