Thomas M. Merritt
31 July 1999
Throughout time, races have been run in order to decide who or what is the fastest of its kind. Yet there has never been a race to determine the fastest insect in the world. Recently scientists studying movement and defense have published data on how fast some insects can run. Which insect is judged the fastest may depend on whether speed is measured in absolute terms (e.g., meters per second [m/s]) or in relative terms (e.g., body lengths per second [bl/s]). This paper will decide that question and name a champion.
The criteria established to determine the fastest insect are set as follows: 1. At least five speed measurement runs must have occurred.. 2. The top speed of the insect must be within a plausible range compared to the multiple test runs. 3. The methods and results must be published in a refereed journal.
C. eburneola has a greater relative speed (171 bl/s) than both P. americana (50 bl/s) and C. hudsoni (120 bl/s). Kamoun and Hogenhout (1996) originally derived the speeds of the tiger beetles by measuring the time and distance the beetles moved when disturbed. The speeds were later reconfirmed for a few of the species of Australian tiger beetles, including C. eburneola, by using video imaging. C. hudsoni was not reconfirmed, but the method used to measure its speed was verified (Kamoun 1999).
The insects that were reviewed for this paper have some physiological modifications to their style of movement. The American cockroach was able to increase its speed to 1.5 m/s by running on its two hind legs (Full & Tu 1991). While it is known that most tiger beetles flee their potential predators through flight, for some tiger beetles flight is a waste of valuable energy and even a possible hazard to reproducing, since their natural habitat is isolated and food is scarce. Natural selection has helped to fix this problem by increasing their ground speed to the point where wings aren't needed. These tiger beetles evolved into a form with only vestigial wings and/or fused elytra. A few of the many species studied from the subgenus Rivacindela have vestigial or deformed wings, including the two speedsters C. hudsoni and C. eburneola (Kamoun & Hogenhout 1996).
The final question now is which measurement of speed to use for the selection of the fastest runner: relative or absolute? If relative speed is the choice, the fastest running insect is C. eburneola . To convert its relative speed into human terms, a 6-foot man would move about 1026 feet per second or approximately 1/5 of a mile per second or 720 mph. This speed almost breaks the sound barrier at sea level (732 mph) and would seem to clearly indicate a winner. Nonetheless, I decided that absolute speed would be the deciding factor for fastest land insect. The reasoning came from human contests for fastest land vehicle (763.035 mph; Young 1998); here size of the vehicle did not matter, only its absolute speed. In addition, for the fastest land animal size was not considered, again only its top speed (cheetah, 70 mph; Young 1998). Therefore, by this criterion the tiger beetle Cicindela hudsoni is the fastest running insect.
Full, R.J. & M.S. Tu. 1991 Mechanics of a rapid running insect: Two-, four-, and six- legged locomotion. J. Exp. Biol. 156: 215-231.
Kamoun, S. & S.A. Hogenhout. 1996. Flightlessness and rapid terrestrial locomotion in tiger beetles of the Cicindela L. subgenus Rivacindela van Nidek from saline habitats of Australia (Coleoptera: Cicindelidae). Coleopt. Bull. 50: 221-230.
Kamoun, S. 1999. E-mail correspondence. Kamoun.1@osu.edu
Young, M.C. 1998. The Guinness Book of Records 1998. Bantam Books. New York.
Copyright 1999 Thomas M. Merritt . This chapter may be freely reproduced and distributed for noncommercial purposes. For more information on copyright, see Copyright and permitted uses.
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