Gliding and Parachuting
Gliding and Parachuting
Many vertebrates have independently evolved the ability to glide. In spite of their name, "flying" squirrels (Glaucomys volans and Glaucomys sabrinus ) glide, not fly, from tree to tree. The little marsupial known as a sugar glider (Petaurus breviceps ) can also glide from tree to tree. Many other animals practice parachuting. The difference between parachuting and gliding is control. Parachuting is simply slowing the rate of descent with little or no attempt to control direction. Flying squirrels carefully steer themselves as they glide from the crown of one tree to the trunk of another.
Cynocephalus is a group of medium-sized gliding mammals closely related to bats. These mammals hang upside down in trees, leaping into the air to glide in search of fruit to eat. The group Exocoetus contains the "flying" fishes. Although a true glider, Exocoetus can extend the range of its glide by flapping its pectoral fins. Flying fishes glide when startled, as by a predator. They swim rapidly underwater, then launch themselves into the air, where they can glide over long distances. Rhacophorus is a tree-dwelling frog with expanded toe membranes that help it fall more slowly after it leaps off a tree. The frog is a true glider, as it can turn and maneuver while airborne.
All gliders and parachuters can increase the relative width of their bodies, thus increasing the surface area exposed to wind resistance. A few gliding frogs flatten their bodies and spread their limbs outward. Gliding snakes not only flatten their bodies, but also draw in the scales on the lower side of the body to form a kind of trough. Some flying lizards, such as Draco volans, have evolved the ability to glide using specialized ribs that spread out like a fan.
Gliding mammals, such as flying squirrels, have a fold of skin on each side of their bodies that extend from the front leg or front wrist back along the side of the body to the hind leg or the ankle. To glide, the squirrel climbs to near the top of a tree and launches itself toward another tree, spreading the fold of skin by holding out its front and rear legs. The glide angle is quite steep, but accurate enough that the squirrel securely lands well
up on the trunk of the target tree and can climb back to a safe height above ground.
Parachuting lacks the implied directional control of gliding. To parachute, the animal launches itself into the air and controls its fall by spreading toes, limbs, and membranes. Parachuters usually fall to the ground or to a lower branch of a tree. Most gliding and parachuting animals are fairly small. Their surface area is large relative to their weight, so air resistance effectively slows them down. If an animal is small enough, it needs no special adaptation for parachuting. For example, an insect can fall from the top of a tall tree all the way down to the ground without harm. The insect is its own parachute.
Gliding and parachuting are not generally evolutionary steps toward flying. They are independent adaptations acquired by animals that live primarily in forests. However, birds may have evolved the ability to fly as an extension of running along the ground with short, gliding hops that became longer and longer over time, evolving eventually into true flight. Roadrunners (Geocòccyx californiànus ) regularly display this behavior. Although capable of flight over short distances, they prefer to run and occasionally glide.
see also Flight.
Elliot Richmond
Bibliography
Curtis, Helena, and N. Sue Barnes. Biology, 5th ed. New York: Worth Publishing, 1989.
Hildebrand, Milton. Analysis of Vertebrate Structure, 4th ed. New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1995.
INDEPENDENT EVOLUTION
Many completely unrelated organisms seemed to have evolved similar structures at different times. For example, mollusks, arthropods, and vertebrates all evolved eyes. However they didn't "borrow" the idea from each other. Each class of animal evolved the structure separately from the others. Grasping appendages, eyes, wings, powerful legs for jumping, and many other features of our animal world are simply good ideas that have been discovered many times through the processes of evolution.
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
Heroes to swoon over; Mistress of Udolpho: The Life of Ann Radcliffe. By Rictor Norton (Leicester University Press, pounds 17.99). Reviewed by Christine Barker.(News)
Newspaper article from: The Birmingham Post (England); 4/3/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...were accusations that made Radcliffe even more determined than...1764, the only child of Ann Oates and her husband William Ward, a haberdasher of Holborn...this to back his thesis that Ann Radcliffe played a leading role in the...
|
|
Blood Will Tell
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 8/10/2003; ; 700+ words
; ...distant castles and abbeys of Old Europe, Henry James challenged the relevance of the Gothic Romance made famous by Ann Ward Radcliffe and transfigured by Jane Austen in her satiric surrender to populist horror, Northanger Abbey (1818). What are...
|
|
Anniversaries
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 7/9/1996; 280 words
; Births: Ann Radcliffe (Ann Ward), novelist, 1764; Charles Bruce Bairnsfather, cartoonist, 1888; Ian Mikardo, former Labour MP, 1908. Deaths: Stephen Langton, Archbishop of Canterbury, 1228; Jan van Eyck, painter, 1440; Edmund...
|
|
Sophia Lee and the Gothic of female community.
Magazine article from: Studies in the Novel; 6/22/1996; ; 700+ words
; ...and artistic contemporaries including the novelists Jane and Anna Maria Porter, Mr. and Mrs. Sheridan, Ann Ward (soon to be Radcliffe), General Paoli, Thomas Lawrence, and William Godwin.(7) According to one report: The Misses Lee...
|
|
Cambridge attractive to retirees
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 3/21/1993; ; 700+ words
; ...a movable feast. The Wards regularly attend classes...rural area," said Ann Ward, "but we did the reverse...to live," said Larry Ward, who sold a string of...stores in 1987. The Wards are among Cambridge...The Wards said that Ann's familiarity with Cambridge from her ...
|
|
Matthew Lewis and the gothic horror of obsessional neurosis.(Viewpoint essay)
Magazine article from: Studies in the Humanities; 12/1/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...his twisted mind this wards off anxiety. And he...immature Gothic romance, Ann Radcliffe focused in her Gothic...affect. In this manner, Radcliffe's narratives thematically...influenced by the works of Radcliffe, Matthew Lewis attempted...
|
|
Authorities to appeal for election candidates.
Newspaper article from: Isle of Man Newspapers (Douglas, England); 4/2/2008; 700+ words
; ...two of the six Douglas wards - St George's and Athol...Peter Howe Richard Martin Ann McDonald Norman Morrey...DOUGLAS St George's Ward Glenda Gwendolen Sanderson...Christopher Birchenough Vivien Ann Quane Arthur Derek Radcliffe Christopher Winston Roberts...William Quigley Richard ...
|
|
Vital Statistics
Newspaper article from: Honolulu Star - Bulletin; 7/6/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...Wayne Hughes and Robyn Ann McKeown Fabio Iacovelli...Heath McDowall and Michelle Ann Ward Ryan Burnell Takashi McGhie...Nhia Yenni Li Robert Blair Radcliffe and Elizabeth Johnson David...Joseph Vaughn and Jodi Ann Coco William Jack Warner...
|
|
Births
Newspaper article from: Sun-Journal Lewiston, Me.; 2/18/2009; 700+ words
; ...a girl to Jennifer Ann (Maletich) and Ward Michael Boudreau of Gardiner...a boy to Racheal Lynn Radcliffe and Thomas Edward Fraser...Grandparents, Tracy Radcliffe of Topsham, Tony Radcliffe...Connor, a boy to Mary Ann Bradstreet and Kevin...
|
|
Honley recollections; HONLEY, MARSDEN, STILE COMMON in the 1950s.(News)
Newspaper article from: Huddersfield Daily Examiner (Huddersfield, England); 2/24/2009; 700+ words
; ...on the left, front row - Ann Whittle, Janet Sutton, Audrey Stead, Marie Ward, Ann Symonds, Carol Hick, Valerie...Greenwood, Alma Taylor, Ann Callaghan, Joan Schofield...Pamela Ashton and Joan Radcliffe.
|
|
Ann (Ward) Radcliffe
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Ann (Ward) Radcliffe 1764-1823, English novelist, b. London. The daughter of a successful tradesman, she married William Radcliffe, a law student who later became editor of the English Chronicle...
|
|
Radcliffe, Ann
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
...and Italy. “What Radcliffe brought to the Gothic was poetry...and plot.” Born Ann Ward on July 9, 1764, Radcliffe spent her first eight years...Both William and his wife, Ann DeWitt Ward, had some prominent...
|
|
Radcliffe, Mrs Ann
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature
Radcliffe, Mrs Ann (1764–1823) (née Ward ), a novelist who published five novels, The Castles of Athlin and Dunbayne (1789), A Sicilian Romance (1790), The Romance...
|
|
Charles Robert Maturin
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...1782-1824, Irish author. A minister by vocation, he wrote novels in the manner of the Gothic horror tale of Ann Ward Radcliffe . They include The Fatal Revenge (1807), The Milesian Chief (1812), and his masterpiece Melmoth the Wanderer...
|
|
Smith, Anna Deavere 1950–
Book article from: Contemporary Theatre, Film and Television
...theatre, 1990—, Ann O'Day Maples Professor of...fellow of Bunting Institute, Radcliffe College. CREDITS Stage Appearances...s Shoes (original poems), Ward Nasse Gallery, New York City...1983. Charlayne Hunter Gault, Ward Nasse Gallery, 1984. Aye...
|