The Leibniz Institute for the Analysis of Biodiversity Change

is a research museum of the Leibniz Association

The constructional morphology of the dicondylic insect head: Mechanical interaction networks and their phylogenetic interpretation

Date: 
Mon, 05/28/2018 - 5:15pm
Meeting point: 
Poppelsdorfer Schloss
Location: 
Lecture hall
Event type: 
Lecture
Event series: 
Colloquium on evolution and biodiversity
Target group: 
Studierende
Lecturer: 
Dr. Alexander Blanke, Institut für Zoologie, Universität zu Köln

The insect head is a mechanical structure optimized for various tasks including the processing of sensory information and feeding. How the different structures involved in e.g. feeding interact mechanically is a central question to better understand the phenotypic evolution of the insect head.

Here, a workflow is presented which allows to analyse the feeding mechanics of biting-chewing insects in a phylogenetic framework. Using multibody dynamics and finite element analysis, it is possible to study how phylogenetically relevant structures behave under load, i.e. feeding.

Phylogenetic correlation analysis is then used to study the interaction networks of such functionally linked structures and how this influences phylogenetic inference. The workflow is illustrated on the Palaeoptera problem – the debated relationships of dragonflies, mayflies and neopterous insects – but it could also be used on a broader scale to investigate the evolution of mechanically loaded structures.

Contact person

Head of Section
+49 228 9122-241
+49 228 9122-295
h.waegele [at] leibniz-zfmk.de

Colloquium on biology

Prof. Dr. A. Blanke
Institute of Evolutionary Biology and Ecology
An der Immenburg 1, 53121 Bonn

 

Prof. Dr. A. Suh
Leibniz-Institut for the Analyses of Biodiversity Change, Museum Koenig Bonn
Adenauerallee 160, 53113 Bonn

 

Place: Large Lecture Hall, Institute of Zoology, Poppelsdorfer Schloß or online via ZOOM

Time: mondays, 5:15 pm