1 00:00:32,350 --> 00:00:35,945 A summer evening on the Körös river in Central Europe. 2 00:00:36,030 --> 00:00:38,260 Its waters are mirror-smooth. 3 00:00:38,350 --> 00:00:42,662 But on this particular day of the year, all that is about to change. 4 00:00:45,550 --> 00:00:48,223 Giant mayflies, Europe's largest, 5 00:00:48,310 --> 00:00:50,141 are starting to rise to the surface 6 00:00:50,230 --> 00:00:53,905 and struggle out of the skins in which they lived as larvae. 7 00:01:00,390 --> 00:01:02,984 At first, they come in ones and twos. 8 00:01:03,070 --> 00:01:05,345 Soon there will be millions. 9 00:01:12,750 --> 00:01:17,141 For two years, they've lived underwater. Now they must fly to find a mate. 10 00:01:17,790 --> 00:01:20,588 This should be the climax of their lives. 11 00:01:27,470 --> 00:01:30,826 The first to appear are quickly taken by predators. 12 00:01:37,070 --> 00:01:39,186 But soon the swarms are so huge 13 00:01:39,270 --> 00:01:42,660 that neither fish nor birds can make any impact on them. 14 00:01:43,910 --> 00:01:48,904 The first mayflies to emerge in this mass hatching on this river in Hungary 15 00:01:48,990 --> 00:01:50,821 are all males. 16 00:01:50,910 --> 00:01:54,744 As soon as they free themselves from the larval skin on the surface, 17 00:01:54,830 --> 00:01:58,106 they take off and seek safety in the banks. 18 00:01:58,190 --> 00:02:03,139 And there they hang in trees and bushes, or indeed on my finger. 19 00:02:03,430 --> 00:02:06,183 And the reason they have to rest like this 20 00:02:06,270 --> 00:02:10,309 is because they still have to make one final moult. 21 00:02:16,430 --> 00:02:21,424 Their wings that were transparent now have a handsome blue tinge 22 00:02:21,510 --> 00:02:26,459 and the elegant filaments at the end of their abdomens are even longer than before. 23 00:02:35,150 --> 00:02:38,062 They are looking for mates, but they have a problem. 24 00:02:38,150 --> 00:02:41,586 They can't feed for they have neither mouth nor stomach. 25 00:02:41,990 --> 00:02:45,983 They have to fuel their flight entirely from the reserves of fat 26 00:02:46,070 --> 00:02:49,460 that they built up when they were larvae feeding in the river. 27 00:02:50,350 --> 00:02:56,141 But that fat will only last them for about half an hour of flight time. 28 00:02:56,630 --> 00:02:59,702 So the race to mate now becomes a frantic one. 29 00:03:02,990 --> 00:03:05,709 The females begin to rise to the surface 30 00:03:05,790 --> 00:03:09,100 and the males fly up and down the river searching for them. 31 00:03:14,190 --> 00:03:16,943 As soon as they find one, they all pounce on her, 32 00:03:17,030 --> 00:03:19,908 competing to be the one to fertilise her eggs. 33 00:03:27,670 --> 00:03:31,299 But the struggle of doing so saps their limited energy. 34 00:03:36,950 --> 00:03:39,418 Before long, they begin to run out of fuel 35 00:03:39,510 --> 00:03:44,300 and though they flutter despairingly, they can't maintain themselves in the air. 36 00:03:50,830 --> 00:03:54,300 Win or lose, their lives are almost over 37 00:03:54,390 --> 00:03:57,939 and dead bodies start to litter the surface of the water. 38 00:04:01,390 --> 00:04:04,268 But the females are still in the air. 39 00:04:04,350 --> 00:04:06,625 They're flying upstream, 40 00:04:06,710 --> 00:04:10,669 judging the depth of the river and the currents in it 41 00:04:10,750 --> 00:04:13,787 to find a place where they can lay their eggs 42 00:04:13,870 --> 00:04:18,500 so that they will float back downriver to the same sort of place 43 00:04:18,590 --> 00:04:21,662 where the adults themselves lived as larvae. 44 00:04:24,070 --> 00:04:29,463 The ancestral mayflies were among the first creatures of any kind to take to the air 45 00:04:29,550 --> 00:04:31,984 about 320 million years ago. 46 00:04:32,870 --> 00:04:37,864 For them, as for their living descendents, flight was a brief but invaluable way 47 00:04:37,950 --> 00:04:41,260 of finding a mate and expanding their breeding territories. 48 00:04:42,430 --> 00:04:46,184 The river has also been the home of another kind of insect 49 00:04:46,270 --> 00:04:51,344 with an equally ancient ancestry and it, too, is beginning to emerge from the water. 50 00:04:53,310 --> 00:04:56,347 Bigger and more ferocious than the mayfly larvae, 51 00:04:56,430 --> 00:04:59,820 it has been feeding on tadpoles, and even small fish. 52 00:05:01,710 --> 00:05:03,985 But that phase of its life is over. 53 00:05:04,630 --> 00:05:08,942 Now, each one has to haul itself out of the water and into the air. 54 00:05:09,470 --> 00:05:13,099 On the top of its thorax, it carries a bulging backpack. 55 00:05:26,190 --> 00:05:29,819 It hunches itself and its outer skin splits. 56 00:05:30,470 --> 00:05:33,587 A very different creature begins to appear. 57 00:05:33,990 --> 00:05:37,027 White threads are drawn out of its flanks. 58 00:05:37,150 --> 00:05:41,029 They're the linings of thin tubes that penetrate deep into its body. 59 00:05:41,110 --> 00:05:46,468 Air tubes that will enable the insect to breathe now that it is out of water. 60 00:05:59,630 --> 00:06:05,341 It gulps air, inflating its body, forcing fluid into the bundle on its back. 61 00:06:05,430 --> 00:06:07,739 Its wings begin to unfurl. 62 00:06:20,510 --> 00:06:24,185 Ten minutes later, the wings open. 63 00:06:24,710 --> 00:06:26,507 They'll never close again. 64 00:06:30,790 --> 00:06:36,979 Next, the huge muscles within its thorax must be exercised to prepare them for action. 65 00:06:42,630 --> 00:06:44,143 And it's away. 66 00:06:52,070 --> 00:06:54,459 Dragonflies, like mayflies, 67 00:06:54,550 --> 00:06:59,066 belong to the most ancient group of insects that flew over the land. 68 00:06:59,150 --> 00:07:01,186 And here, in the museum in Harvard, 69 00:07:01,270 --> 00:07:06,549 there are fossils of them that are 150 million years old. 70 00:07:10,510 --> 00:07:14,662 They're almost identical with species that are still flying today. 71 00:07:15,350 --> 00:07:18,467 However, they are by no means the oldest. 72 00:07:20,270 --> 00:07:24,707 We know that there were other dragonflies even earlier, 73 00:07:24,790 --> 00:07:27,304 225 million years ago, 74 00:07:27,390 --> 00:07:30,985 that were flying through the Coal Measure swamps. 75 00:07:31,070 --> 00:07:34,858 We don't have complete specimens of any of those, 76 00:07:34,950 --> 00:07:39,978 but there are some tantalising and amazing fragments. And here's one. 77 00:07:54,110 --> 00:07:57,864 This marvellously preserved wing 78 00:07:57,950 --> 00:08:03,263 has very much the same pattern of veins supporting panels of membrane 79 00:08:03,350 --> 00:08:05,386 as living species. 80 00:08:05,470 --> 00:08:09,782 The thing that makes it different is its size. 81 00:08:10,950 --> 00:08:15,785 From base to tip, it measures 12 inches, 30 centimetres. 82 00:08:16,910 --> 00:08:21,301 Little imagination is needed to replace the membrane that must have been there. 83 00:08:21,870 --> 00:08:26,102 This insect must have had a wingspan as big as a seagull's. 84 00:08:30,270 --> 00:08:35,424 Vibrating these wings preparing for flight must have been a formidable business. 85 00:08:45,150 --> 00:08:49,063 A creature this size must have been at least 10 times heavier 86 00:08:49,150 --> 00:08:51,903 than the largest insect flying today. 87 00:08:51,990 --> 00:08:54,788 How did it manage to get into the air? 88 00:08:54,870 --> 00:08:59,580 One suggestion is that in those far-off times there was much more oxygen in the air 89 00:08:59,670 --> 00:09:04,107 and that would have given the extra power needed to beat these huge wings. 90 00:09:06,390 --> 00:09:10,542 But it's a fair guess that this ancient pioneer of the skies 91 00:09:10,630 --> 00:09:14,908 flew with much the same technique as dragonflies do today. 92 00:09:20,990 --> 00:09:24,665 Living dragonflies can reach speeds of nearly 40 miles an hour 93 00:09:24,750 --> 00:09:28,265 and fly several miles in their search for new territory. 94 00:09:38,470 --> 00:09:43,669 They're all aerial hunters, relying on their supreme aeronautical skills 95 00:09:43,750 --> 00:09:46,184 to snatch their prey from the sky. 96 00:09:53,910 --> 00:09:57,186 Their great agility in the air comes from being able 97 00:09:57,270 --> 00:10:00,740 to beat each of their two pairs of wings quite independently. 98 00:10:06,110 --> 00:10:08,749 You can see clearly that they do this 99 00:10:08,830 --> 00:10:12,379 when the camera slows down the action 400 times. 100 00:10:14,790 --> 00:10:17,623 This one is coming in to its perch. 101 00:10:17,710 --> 00:10:22,738 Perfect control is essential to make all the tiny adjustments needed 102 00:10:22,830 --> 00:10:25,390 for an accurate, pinpoint touchdown. 103 00:10:37,070 --> 00:10:41,302 All dragonflies, when they perch, hold their wings outstretched. 104 00:10:42,390 --> 00:10:45,462 But they have close relations, damselflies, 105 00:10:45,550 --> 00:10:49,225 and they perch with their wings closed above their backs. 106 00:10:49,710 --> 00:10:53,180 Mosquitoes stand little chance when damsels go hunting. 107 00:11:03,270 --> 00:11:06,660 But flight for damsels, as for dragonflies and mayflies, 108 00:11:06,750 --> 00:11:09,947 is primarily the means to find a mate and to breed. 109 00:11:10,030 --> 00:11:13,864 And to do that they, like the others, need water. 110 00:11:16,630 --> 00:11:20,828 Flight is itself an important element in their courtship. 111 00:11:20,910 --> 00:11:26,826 These blue males must first establish a territory for themselves above open water. 112 00:11:26,910 --> 00:11:31,028 And that involves aerial jousts that can last for hours. 113 00:11:37,350 --> 00:11:42,105 Mature females, whose wings in this species are not blue but golden brown, 114 00:11:42,190 --> 00:11:46,741 are attracted to those males who control good places for egg-laying. 115 00:11:46,830 --> 00:11:50,789 But the males must, nonetheless, display the correct wing signals. 116 00:11:53,590 --> 00:11:57,469 This one, patrolling his territory, is using a special flight 117 00:11:57,550 --> 00:12:01,463 to flaunt his handsome wings, inviting females to join him. 118 00:12:06,870 --> 00:12:11,944 A female signals her willingness to consider doing so with a flick of her wings. 119 00:12:19,910 --> 00:12:22,822 So now, he treats her to his full display. 120 00:12:30,470 --> 00:12:33,860 The female's tail-up posture is apparently a signal 121 00:12:33,950 --> 00:12:37,181 that declares that she's not yet sufficiently impressed. 122 00:12:44,430 --> 00:12:48,309 Now it seems he's got it right. Her tail is pointing downwards. 123 00:12:49,870 --> 00:12:53,863 He grabs the back of her neck with the claspers at the end of his abdomen. 124 00:12:57,350 --> 00:12:59,420 She brings her abdomen forward 125 00:12:59,510 --> 00:13:03,105 to reach a chamber under his thorax where he stores his sperm. 126 00:13:03,670 --> 00:13:07,709 His first action, though, is to scour out her genital tract 127 00:13:07,790 --> 00:13:11,465 to remove any sperm that might be there from a previous mating. 128 00:13:12,030 --> 00:13:15,545 Only when he's done that will he inject his own sperm. 129 00:13:21,630 --> 00:13:26,021 And now he must show her the best places in his territory for laying eggs. 130 00:13:31,510 --> 00:13:36,982 He flies up and down with his tail curled and lands on a suitable piece of vegetation. 131 00:13:41,670 --> 00:13:44,389 The female settles down to lay, 132 00:13:44,470 --> 00:13:48,145 cutting slits in the plant stems with her ovipositor 133 00:13:48,230 --> 00:13:50,903 and inserting an egg into each one. 134 00:13:50,990 --> 00:13:53,060 She may lay as many as 30. 135 00:13:55,390 --> 00:14:01,067 And all the time the male keeps guard, lest rival males should try to mate with her. 136 00:14:06,230 --> 00:14:11,623 In other damsel species, the males make sure that no other male can reach their partners 137 00:14:11,710 --> 00:14:15,146 by keeping hold of them throughout the whole process. 138 00:14:24,310 --> 00:14:27,905 The young that hatch from the eggs of these insects, the larvae, 139 00:14:27,990 --> 00:14:30,379 look very unlike their parents. 140 00:14:30,470 --> 00:14:35,419 This is a dragonfly larva, and it's in this form that dragonflies spend most of their lives. 141 00:14:37,110 --> 00:14:41,228 The larvae of both dragonfly and damselfly are savage predators. 142 00:14:41,310 --> 00:14:44,746 They'll even feed on their own kind if they get the chance. 143 00:14:54,590 --> 00:14:58,105 This particular larva has a very special problem. 144 00:14:58,550 --> 00:15:04,989 It's a cascade damsel and it has to snatch prey that is swept past it by the rushing water. 145 00:15:08,070 --> 00:15:13,190 Cascade damsels are very rare and live around just a few Central American waterfalls, 146 00:15:13,270 --> 00:15:16,262 like this one in the mountains of Costa Rica. 147 00:15:25,390 --> 00:15:31,579 The adult male has to perform his courtship flight under very difficult conditions indeed. 148 00:15:49,710 --> 00:15:53,305 Somehow, he's able to fly even when he's dripping wet. 149 00:15:53,910 --> 00:15:58,620 And he shows off to the females by actually flying through the cascades of water. 150 00:16:03,350 --> 00:16:07,309 To be a good breeding territory, the vertical rock surface 151 00:16:07,390 --> 00:16:10,302 has to be covered by just the right amount of water. 152 00:16:10,590 --> 00:16:12,899 Too deep and prey may be out of reach. 153 00:16:13,270 --> 00:16:16,740 Too shallow and the larvae could be picked off by birds. 154 00:16:19,070 --> 00:16:23,905 A female will only mate with a male if she approves of his choice of territory. 155 00:16:25,230 --> 00:16:27,585 And this one, it seems, does. 156 00:16:41,510 --> 00:16:46,061 This is it. And she carefully fixes her eggs to the rocks. 157 00:16:57,470 --> 00:17:02,339 But not all damsels need great areas of open water for breeding. 158 00:17:06,270 --> 00:17:10,388 In the rainforests of Central America, like this one here in Costa Rica, 159 00:17:10,470 --> 00:17:13,860 there's a damselfly that has managed to break the link 160 00:17:13,950 --> 00:17:17,226 with open expanses of water like rivers and ponds. 161 00:17:17,310 --> 00:17:21,098 It's also one of the most spectacular members of the entire family. 162 00:17:26,510 --> 00:17:28,899 The helicopter damselfly, 163 00:17:28,990 --> 00:17:33,541 the largest in the world, with a wingspan of up to 20 centimetres. 164 00:17:35,390 --> 00:17:40,145 Males tend to frequent sunlit patches where the females can see them easily. 165 00:17:40,470 --> 00:17:43,985 And they have a special lazy, flapping way of flying 166 00:17:44,070 --> 00:17:46,538 that is, in itself, an invitation. 167 00:18:00,030 --> 00:18:05,707 But although helicopter damsels can live away from rivers and streams... 168 00:18:07,190 --> 00:18:11,502 the females nonetheless require a little water in which to lay their eggs. 169 00:18:11,590 --> 00:18:14,502 And there is just enough 170 00:18:14,590 --> 00:18:16,740 in this little hollow here. 171 00:18:16,910 --> 00:18:19,060 And with luck, she'll come down. 172 00:18:34,670 --> 00:18:38,060 And into the water they go. 173 00:18:47,510 --> 00:18:51,025 But these eggs have watertight casings 174 00:18:51,110 --> 00:18:53,101 so they can be laid in air. 175 00:18:53,190 --> 00:18:57,229 They are butterfly eggs. The link with water has been broken. 176 00:19:00,190 --> 00:19:04,103 Butterflies fly in a very different way from dragonflies. 177 00:19:04,590 --> 00:19:09,220 They overlap their two pairs of wings so that they flap as a single pair. 178 00:19:09,990 --> 00:19:13,539 They can't fly as fast or as aerobatically as dragonflies, 179 00:19:13,630 --> 00:19:19,102 but they, nonetheless, are tireless in their search for the particular food that will suit their young. 180 00:19:19,190 --> 00:19:22,944 And in the case of the cabbage white, that's cabbage. 181 00:19:31,190 --> 00:19:34,262 Now, on the surface of this cabbage leaf 182 00:19:34,350 --> 00:19:38,423 there's a patch of tiny little pillbox-shaped eggs. 183 00:19:38,790 --> 00:19:42,100 And when they hatch, the baby caterpillars will emerge 184 00:19:42,190 --> 00:19:45,500 and make an instant meal of the greenery. 185 00:19:49,510 --> 00:19:52,104 And they are already stirring. 186 00:19:58,270 --> 00:20:01,899 But the first dish on the menu is not vegetables, 187 00:20:01,990 --> 00:20:04,629 it's the shells of their own egg capsules, 188 00:20:04,710 --> 00:20:08,225 protein-rich and far too nourishing to be wasted. 189 00:20:09,230 --> 00:20:12,586 That first course, however, doesn't last long. 190 00:20:13,150 --> 00:20:16,267 Now for the main dish, cabbage leaves. 191 00:20:17,950 --> 00:20:22,182 When cabbage plants are damaged, their leaves release a smell, 192 00:20:22,270 --> 00:20:26,263 and that quite often attracts the attention of a rather different insect. 193 00:20:33,750 --> 00:20:36,947 It's a tiny wasp called Cotesia. 194 00:20:37,030 --> 00:20:41,387 She, too, is trying to make sure that her young have food immediately available. 195 00:20:41,470 --> 00:20:43,859 But they like living flesh 196 00:20:43,950 --> 00:20:47,989 so she injects her eggs into the butterfly's caterpillars. 197 00:20:53,670 --> 00:20:56,980 She does this with such surgical precision 198 00:20:57,070 --> 00:20:59,538 that her victims are not mortally injured 199 00:20:59,630 --> 00:21:02,986 and they continue feeding as if nothing had happened to them. 200 00:21:15,390 --> 00:21:19,588 But now, much of what the caterpillars so laboriously gather 201 00:21:19,670 --> 00:21:23,504 goes to nourish the wasp grubs that are developing within them. 202 00:21:26,070 --> 00:21:29,540 As the caterpillars grow, they shed their skins. 203 00:21:29,630 --> 00:21:32,940 They do so five times until, ultimately, 204 00:21:33,030 --> 00:21:37,069 they are 800 times heavier than they were when they first hatched. 205 00:21:37,910 --> 00:21:41,425 This fully-grown caterpillar must now find shelter. 206 00:21:46,270 --> 00:21:48,784 A strand of silk trails behind it, 207 00:21:48,870 --> 00:21:51,703 silk with which it ties itself to a twig. 208 00:21:51,790 --> 00:21:55,544 And here, over a couple of days, it changes into a chrysalis. 209 00:22:06,150 --> 00:22:09,665 Those caterpillars that were injected by the Cotesia wasp 210 00:22:09,750 --> 00:22:11,263 don't get that chance. 211 00:22:11,350 --> 00:22:14,183 The grubs within them are now emerging. 212 00:22:23,150 --> 00:22:26,984 They, too, spin silk which hardens to form a cocoon 213 00:22:27,070 --> 00:22:29,425 beneath the caterpillars' empty skin. 214 00:22:34,710 --> 00:22:38,225 Inside, the wasp grubs are transforming themselves 215 00:22:38,310 --> 00:22:42,349 and two weeks later, out come the adult wasps. 216 00:23:02,590 --> 00:23:04,979 A different future awaits the chrysalis. 217 00:23:05,510 --> 00:23:08,468 Within its shell, and over a similar two weeks, 218 00:23:08,550 --> 00:23:12,020 the caterpillar's body has been broken down and reassembled 219 00:23:12,110 --> 00:23:14,704 and now the adult is ready to emerge. 220 00:23:20,270 --> 00:23:24,024 Its wings, like those of a newly emerged dragonfly, 221 00:23:24,110 --> 00:23:26,305 need pumping up with liquid. 222 00:23:37,630 --> 00:23:42,146 The creature that was once an egg, then a caterpillar, then a chrysalis 223 00:23:42,230 --> 00:23:44,903 has attained its final incarnation. 224 00:23:49,870 --> 00:23:52,623 So another generation of cabbage whites 225 00:23:52,710 --> 00:23:55,429 set off to find good places for their young. 226 00:23:57,390 --> 00:24:01,827 With their fragile-looking wings and apparently erratic flight, 227 00:24:01,910 --> 00:24:05,698 butterflies might not seem to be the most powerful of flyers. 228 00:24:06,110 --> 00:24:10,149 But, in fact, they are extremely accomplished aeronauts 229 00:24:10,230 --> 00:24:13,142 and they can fly hundreds of miles if necessary 230 00:24:13,230 --> 00:24:15,300 to find the food they need. 231 00:24:24,190 --> 00:24:28,024 Some butterflies use the power of flight for another purpose. 232 00:24:28,110 --> 00:24:29,987 To escape bad weather. 233 00:24:31,030 --> 00:24:34,739 These lush subtropical valleys in southern Taiwan 234 00:24:34,830 --> 00:24:37,390 are warm and green all year round. 235 00:24:37,470 --> 00:24:41,588 And in winter, they're filled by literally millions of butterflies. 236 00:24:53,470 --> 00:24:57,463 They've all come from the north of this great island, 500 miles away, 237 00:24:57,550 --> 00:25:02,670 for there the cold weather has killed off the plants on which they fed during the summer. 238 00:25:10,390 --> 00:25:14,463 In the mornings, they take off from their roosts and head for the forest canopy 239 00:25:14,550 --> 00:25:17,223 to warm themselves in the rays of the rising sun. 240 00:25:19,390 --> 00:25:22,268 They have to conserve as much energy as they can. 241 00:25:22,350 --> 00:25:26,343 So, instead of using their stores of fat to warm themselves, 242 00:25:26,430 --> 00:25:28,785 they absorb the sun's heat. 243 00:25:35,750 --> 00:25:38,218 There are four species of crow butterflies here 244 00:25:38,310 --> 00:25:41,268 as well as two species of blue tiger butterflies, 245 00:25:41,350 --> 00:25:43,181 and all find enough food 246 00:25:43,270 --> 00:25:46,307 to sustain themselves in these warm and fertile valleys. 247 00:25:48,750 --> 00:25:52,982 Butterflies feed on liquid, nectar and the juices of rotting fruit, 248 00:25:53,070 --> 00:25:59,305 and to suck it up they have instead of jaws an extraordinarily long but extremely thin tube. 249 00:26:09,310 --> 00:26:13,781 In a newly emerged butterfly, this tube is in two pieces 250 00:26:13,870 --> 00:26:17,909 for it is, in fact, a highly modified pair of mouthparts. 251 00:26:17,990 --> 00:26:20,663 Each half has its own muscles and nerve supply 252 00:26:20,750 --> 00:26:24,379 so that the whole unit is fully moveable and controllable. 253 00:26:28,510 --> 00:26:31,183 As the young butterfly prepares for adult life, 254 00:26:31,270 --> 00:26:34,387 these two sections are zipped together to form a tube, 255 00:26:34,470 --> 00:26:36,665 like a miniature drinking straw. 256 00:26:36,750 --> 00:26:39,787 A special fluid cements the two halves together. 257 00:26:41,310 --> 00:26:44,586 The tube is largely made of a material called resilin 258 00:26:44,670 --> 00:26:48,424 which, when distorted, springs back to its original shape. 259 00:26:48,510 --> 00:26:51,627 In this case, a spiral, like a watch spring. 260 00:26:51,710 --> 00:26:56,386 When the muscles within it contract, it straightens into a long probe 261 00:26:56,470 --> 00:26:59,940 that the butterfly can then insert deep into a flower. 262 00:27:14,150 --> 00:27:18,268 Butterflies and moths have the largest of all insect wings 263 00:27:18,430 --> 00:27:22,309 and their great size means that they can be used very effectively as billboards 264 00:27:22,390 --> 00:27:26,588 on which to display patterns proclaiming the species of their owner. 265 00:27:27,630 --> 00:27:33,023 The patterns are produced by tiny scales that cover the wings like tiles on a roof. 266 00:27:33,110 --> 00:27:36,625 Some have a microscopic structure that refracts the light 267 00:27:36,710 --> 00:27:39,622 and gives the wing a brilliant iridescent shimmer. 268 00:27:41,230 --> 00:27:43,664 Others contain chemical pigments. 269 00:27:48,670 --> 00:27:50,786 With these lovely advertisements, 270 00:27:50,870 --> 00:27:55,022 a male butterfly displays for females and warns off rivals. 271 00:28:00,510 --> 00:28:05,538 Vivid patterns and bright colours are used to a much lesser degree by moths, 272 00:28:05,630 --> 00:28:09,987 for many are only active at night when colours, of course, are not easily seen. 273 00:28:14,550 --> 00:28:17,587 Moths also feed primarily on nectar 274 00:28:17,670 --> 00:28:20,423 which they suck up in the same way as butterflies do. 275 00:28:21,070 --> 00:28:24,142 But one moth manages to tap a food source 276 00:28:24,230 --> 00:28:26,505 no butterfly has yet exploited. 277 00:28:29,030 --> 00:28:31,339 It comes from lantern bugs 278 00:28:31,430 --> 00:28:34,945 which feed by drilling into the bark of a tree with their proboscis 279 00:28:35,030 --> 00:28:37,021 and sucking out the sap. 280 00:28:37,110 --> 00:28:40,500 This contains a little protein, which the bug wants, 281 00:28:40,590 --> 00:28:43,707 but a lot of sugar, most of which it doesn't want. 282 00:28:43,790 --> 00:28:46,588 So it squirts out the sweet excess. 283 00:28:46,670 --> 00:28:50,140 And to make sure that this doesn't attract ants that might attack it, 284 00:28:50,230 --> 00:28:53,108 it fires the droplets well away from the tree trunk 285 00:28:53,190 --> 00:28:56,899 with a tiny spring-loaded spatula at the end of its abdomen. 286 00:29:06,230 --> 00:29:08,824 One enterprising species of moth 287 00:29:08,910 --> 00:29:11,822 regularly sits behind the bug all night 288 00:29:11,950 --> 00:29:15,226 with the curled tip of its proboscis delicately placed 289 00:29:15,310 --> 00:29:17,540 in the stream of the droplets. 290 00:29:30,590 --> 00:29:35,027 As sugar water accumulates, so the moth sucks it up. 291 00:29:44,030 --> 00:29:47,909 Most moths, however, feed by the rather more laborious method 292 00:29:47,990 --> 00:29:50,220 of flying from flower to flower. 293 00:29:50,310 --> 00:29:54,861 A few, the busiest, do so not only at night but during the day as well. 294 00:29:54,950 --> 00:29:56,861 These are the hawk moths 295 00:29:56,950 --> 00:30:00,499 and there are several species of them gathering nectar from this buddleia bush 296 00:30:00,590 --> 00:30:02,546 in the south of France. 297 00:30:05,110 --> 00:30:10,025 This hawk moth can fly very fast indeed when it wants to, 298 00:30:10,110 --> 00:30:13,341 but it can also hover, as it's doing now, 299 00:30:13,430 --> 00:30:17,218 to sip nectar from each one of these small flowers. 300 00:30:18,750 --> 00:30:21,583 Beating its wings as fast as this, of course, 301 00:30:21,670 --> 00:30:24,025 takes a great deal of energy. 302 00:30:24,110 --> 00:30:27,546 So these hawk moths have to spend much of their day 303 00:30:27,630 --> 00:30:30,702 going from flower to flower sipping the nectar 304 00:30:30,790 --> 00:30:35,068 which is so rich in the carbohydrates they need to power their flight. 305 00:30:39,950 --> 00:30:42,623 They have huge forward-pointing eyes 306 00:30:42,710 --> 00:30:45,941 that enable them to aim their proboscis with such accuracy 307 00:30:46,030 --> 00:30:49,625 that it slips into the exact centre of each tiny flower. 308 00:30:51,830 --> 00:30:55,061 With so many minute flowers so closely bunched together, 309 00:30:55,150 --> 00:30:58,267 it would be easy for the moth to visit some twice. 310 00:30:58,350 --> 00:31:00,181 But that would waste energy. 311 00:31:00,270 --> 00:31:02,864 And if we mark each flower as the moth drinks from it, 312 00:31:02,950 --> 00:31:06,829 it's clear that the moth somehow or other never does this. 313 00:31:13,870 --> 00:31:17,465 Hummingbird hawk moths have no difficulty in hovering. 314 00:31:19,270 --> 00:31:21,659 Bee hawks, however, have heavier bodies 315 00:31:21,750 --> 00:31:25,743 and they sometimes use their legs to help support themselves as they work. 316 00:31:32,190 --> 00:31:34,988 Their need to keep drinking is so pressing 317 00:31:35,110 --> 00:31:39,581 that a female will continue to do that even when the male with whom she's mating 318 00:31:39,670 --> 00:31:42,867 seems to be trying to fly in the opposite direction. 319 00:31:47,190 --> 00:31:50,978 The buddleia plant may be a particular favourite of hawk moths, 320 00:31:51,070 --> 00:31:53,061 but it is, of course, a foreigner 321 00:31:53,150 --> 00:31:56,699 introduced into our gardens from China in the 19th century. 322 00:31:57,230 --> 00:32:01,940 The hawk moth's original supplies of nectar came from the flowers of the meadows 323 00:32:02,030 --> 00:32:05,625 and they still feed there, alongside many other insects. 324 00:32:06,270 --> 00:32:07,862 This is a carpenter bee. 325 00:32:08,910 --> 00:32:12,823 Bees also have two pairs of wings, but they're hooked together 326 00:32:12,910 --> 00:32:15,902 so, like those of butterflies, they operate as one. 327 00:32:19,550 --> 00:32:23,338 Bumblebees have particularly large and heavy bodies 328 00:32:23,430 --> 00:32:26,547 and flight for them can be a real effort. 329 00:32:26,630 --> 00:32:30,145 That's particularly so in spring when the mornings are cold 330 00:32:30,230 --> 00:32:33,779 and queen bumblebees are just emerging from their winter sleep. 331 00:32:34,910 --> 00:32:37,868 It's only a few degrees above freezing, 332 00:32:37,950 --> 00:32:41,226 but a queen needs to get started early to look for food. 333 00:32:42,590 --> 00:32:44,865 The thick, furry hairs on her body 334 00:32:44,950 --> 00:32:47,942 help to conserve what heat she manages to generate. 335 00:32:49,630 --> 00:32:54,306 At the moment, she's only a few degrees warmer than the surrounding vegetation 336 00:32:54,390 --> 00:32:56,745 as the thermal camera clearly shows. 337 00:32:56,830 --> 00:33:01,142 Her body is only marginally more pink than the blue leaves and moss around her. 338 00:33:03,750 --> 00:33:07,026 But she has a special way of warming up for flight. 339 00:33:10,070 --> 00:33:12,504 She can put her wings out of gear 340 00:33:12,630 --> 00:33:16,703 so that without moving them she can rev up the wing muscles inside. 341 00:33:16,790 --> 00:33:21,989 And that raises the temperature within her thorax by 20 degrees centigrade or even more, 342 00:33:22,070 --> 00:33:25,904 as the expanding yellow image on the thermal camera indicates. 343 00:33:36,670 --> 00:33:40,140 Her body temperature is now over 30 degrees centigrade. 344 00:33:40,470 --> 00:33:43,189 At last, she has a chance of liftoff. 345 00:33:56,670 --> 00:33:59,503 She will now be able to visit the spring flowers 346 00:33:59,590 --> 00:34:02,582 while it's still too cold for others to do so. 347 00:34:18,670 --> 00:34:22,265 The long trumpets of the daffodils retain heat very well 348 00:34:22,350 --> 00:34:26,662 and they're still warm even after their hot-bodied visitors have left. 349 00:34:34,030 --> 00:34:39,150 Flies, back in their distant evolutionary past, also had two pairs of wings. 350 00:34:39,230 --> 00:34:40,982 But their back pair 351 00:34:41,070 --> 00:34:44,426 have been reduced to simple knob-ended rods. 352 00:34:46,390 --> 00:34:49,427 These are particularly long on crane flies. 353 00:34:49,510 --> 00:34:52,946 They are part of the fly's flight instrumentation. 354 00:34:53,030 --> 00:34:56,147 Microscopic sensors on their upper and lower surfaces 355 00:34:56,230 --> 00:35:01,258 tell their owner about the air currents around its body and so help in flight control. 356 00:35:01,350 --> 00:35:03,784 They start up even before takeoff. 357 00:35:10,390 --> 00:35:15,180 Flies are such accomplished flyers that they can land upside down on a ceiling 358 00:35:15,270 --> 00:35:18,068 or, in this case, the underside of a twig. 359 00:35:30,270 --> 00:35:34,104 Only when you slow down a fly's flight, here by 100 times, 360 00:35:34,190 --> 00:35:38,024 can you fully appreciate what superb aerial control they have. 361 00:35:46,510 --> 00:35:49,388 Some species, like these long-legged flies, 362 00:35:49,470 --> 00:35:52,746 flaunt their wings in courtship just as damselflies do. 363 00:36:02,950 --> 00:36:06,181 These dance flies are voracious hunters 364 00:36:06,270 --> 00:36:10,468 and it's particularly important for them that they perform their dance correctly. 365 00:36:10,550 --> 00:36:14,338 If one doesn't get it right, its partner might well eat it. 366 00:36:41,510 --> 00:36:45,264 This performance, however, seems to have been up to standard. 367 00:37:11,030 --> 00:37:12,543 For hover flies, 368 00:37:12,630 --> 00:37:16,145 arguably the most accomplished of all insect aviators, 369 00:37:16,230 --> 00:37:21,145 immaculate aerial control is what makes a male attractive to a female. 370 00:37:23,310 --> 00:37:29,180 A male lays claim to a mating territory by trying to stay in exactly the same position in space 371 00:37:29,270 --> 00:37:31,181 for as long as possible. 372 00:37:31,270 --> 00:37:32,498 That's not easy 373 00:37:32,590 --> 00:37:36,663 when there are others all around you trying to do precisely the same thing. 374 00:37:37,350 --> 00:37:41,628 It might seem that he's absolutely motionless. 375 00:37:42,630 --> 00:37:48,182 But, in fact, he's having to make continual changes to adjust for slight currents in the air. 376 00:37:48,270 --> 00:37:51,262 It's an amazing piece of acrobatics, 377 00:37:51,350 --> 00:37:56,982 far better than anything that we could do in a helicopter... 378 00:37:57,830 --> 00:38:02,221 and it's all done in order to impress the female, 379 00:38:02,310 --> 00:38:07,509 to show her that he is superb at holding his territory. 380 00:38:13,070 --> 00:38:18,144 Having to chase away rivals that come too close is an exhausting business. 381 00:38:18,230 --> 00:38:21,620 And when you're trying to maintain your hold on a particular point in midair, 382 00:38:21,710 --> 00:38:24,508 even a small midge has to be chased away. 383 00:38:33,030 --> 00:38:35,021 After a morning spent doing this, 384 00:38:35,110 --> 00:38:38,989 a male hover fly may have lost as much as a third of his body weight. 385 00:38:39,070 --> 00:38:43,939 Little wonder that he takes a break at midday in order to rest and refuel. 386 00:38:45,310 --> 00:38:49,223 He dabs up nectar with mouthparts that are shaped like a pad. 387 00:38:59,670 --> 00:39:02,025 Having refilled his fuel tank, 388 00:39:02,110 --> 00:39:06,308 the male returns to his territory for the afternoon session of hovering 389 00:39:06,390 --> 00:39:10,383 in the hope of attracting yet another female and mating with her. 390 00:39:15,430 --> 00:39:18,581 Once again, with his superb eyesight, 391 00:39:18,670 --> 00:39:22,822 he's ready to spot anything that might whizz by him at high speed 392 00:39:22,910 --> 00:39:24,628 who could be a female. 393 00:39:24,710 --> 00:39:28,225 And I might just be able to fool him with a peashooter. 394 00:40:08,870 --> 00:40:14,263 Although there may seem to be an extraordinarily large number of different flies in the world, 395 00:40:14,350 --> 00:40:18,821 it's actually the beetles that are the most varied of all insect groups. 396 00:40:19,710 --> 00:40:22,986 There are 300,000 species of them. 397 00:40:23,070 --> 00:40:26,779 Most find their food by crawling and burrowing on the ground. 398 00:40:26,870 --> 00:40:29,987 And to prevent their wings from being damaged in the process, 399 00:40:30,070 --> 00:40:33,540 they've turned the front pair into protective shields. 400 00:40:34,270 --> 00:40:38,058 Some, like weevils, keep their wing covers permanently closed 401 00:40:38,150 --> 00:40:42,382 and before takeoff, push their functional wings out of special slits. 402 00:40:44,390 --> 00:40:48,349 Ladybirds, like most other beetles, raise their wing covers 403 00:40:48,430 --> 00:40:51,786 and hold them clear of the hind wings throughout their flight. 404 00:40:51,870 --> 00:40:57,627 The result could hardly be called aerodynamic and consequently their flight is rather lumbering. 405 00:41:03,070 --> 00:41:05,823 Blister beetles are scarcely any better. 406 00:41:12,350 --> 00:41:16,502 When a flight is over, their hind wings have to be packed away beneath the covers, 407 00:41:16,590 --> 00:41:18,546 a process that can be so complex 408 00:41:18,630 --> 00:41:23,067 that it demands all the skills of a Japanese master of origami. 409 00:41:40,390 --> 00:41:44,065 With flight playing a relatively small part in their lives, 410 00:41:44,150 --> 00:41:46,584 many beetles have grown very large. 411 00:41:46,670 --> 00:41:50,219 This one, the titan beetle that lives in the forests of the Amazon, 412 00:41:50,310 --> 00:41:53,461 is almost certainly the biggest of all insects. 413 00:41:57,510 --> 00:42:00,149 I have to handle him with considerable care 414 00:42:00,230 --> 00:42:05,429 because those huge mandibles at the front are powerful enough, it's said, 415 00:42:05,510 --> 00:42:08,547 to be able to cut straight through a pencil. 416 00:42:09,470 --> 00:42:13,748 He can fly, but he can't get into the air from the ground. 417 00:42:13,870 --> 00:42:15,588 He's too heavy to do that 418 00:42:15,670 --> 00:42:19,629 so he has to climb trees and launch himself into the air that way. 419 00:42:19,710 --> 00:42:24,579 And that's why he's got such powerful legs armed with sharp claws. 420 00:42:25,430 --> 00:42:30,140 The titan is now known to be the biggest of all beetles. 421 00:42:30,230 --> 00:42:35,987 The champion is seven inches long from the tip of the mandibles to the tip of his abdomen. 422 00:42:36,830 --> 00:42:41,346 The larva of this great monster has not yet been found. 423 00:42:41,710 --> 00:42:46,386 But it must be at least twice as big as the beetle, a really huge grub. 424 00:42:47,790 --> 00:42:52,500 Beetles and many other insects spend so much of their lives as flightless larvae, 425 00:42:52,590 --> 00:42:57,266 that it would be more accurate to think of them as creatures of the earth rather than the sky. 426 00:42:58,070 --> 00:43:00,379 Flight for them, as it is for the mayflies, 427 00:43:00,470 --> 00:43:03,030 is a relatively brief episode at the end of their lives. 428 00:43:04,590 --> 00:43:10,142 These cicadas in the eastern United States spend 17 whole years below ground, 429 00:43:10,230 --> 00:43:12,300 sucking sap from tree roots. 430 00:43:12,390 --> 00:43:16,508 And then, within a few days, a whole population emerges. 431 00:43:31,990 --> 00:43:35,744 There may be millions of them in a single acre of land. 432 00:43:43,710 --> 00:43:48,022 They clamber up the trees whose roots have provided them with sap 433 00:43:48,110 --> 00:43:50,624 for all of those 17 years. 434 00:44:08,230 --> 00:44:12,143 And here they change into their adult costume. 435 00:44:36,470 --> 00:44:40,986 Now they have the wings they need to search for a partner. 436 00:44:44,270 --> 00:44:48,627 Empty larval cases cover the tree trunks and the ground beneath. 437 00:44:51,550 --> 00:44:53,666 (CICADAS SINGING) 438 00:44:53,750 --> 00:44:58,505 And above, from the branches, the millions have started to sing. 439 00:44:58,870 --> 00:45:01,259 The noise is ear-splitting. 440 00:45:06,830 --> 00:45:09,185 (SCREECHING SINGING) 441 00:45:17,470 --> 00:45:20,587 After 17 years of living underground, 442 00:45:20,670 --> 00:45:25,141 the cicadas are now approaching the climax of their lives, 443 00:45:25,230 --> 00:45:28,188 and for the males, that means this. 444 00:45:34,430 --> 00:45:37,786 The call is his way of attracting a female. 445 00:45:45,830 --> 00:45:49,379 The females reply with a quite different sound. 446 00:45:50,510 --> 00:45:51,784 (CLICKING) 447 00:45:53,270 --> 00:45:56,740 A click made by flicking her wings. 448 00:45:56,830 --> 00:45:59,947 So, that's what the males are listening out for. 449 00:46:00,110 --> 00:46:05,468 I can imitate the female's wing flip with a snap of my fingers 450 00:46:05,550 --> 00:46:08,622 and that causes them to follow me anywhere 451 00:46:08,710 --> 00:46:12,385 because they are so determined to find a female. 452 00:46:27,790 --> 00:46:29,781 Now, can I bring you back? 453 00:46:33,870 --> 00:46:35,906 How about coming this way? 454 00:46:45,150 --> 00:46:47,220 Oh, the noise is awful. 455 00:46:48,430 --> 00:46:50,341 Come this way. Come on. 456 00:46:51,030 --> 00:46:53,021 Yes, I can hear you. 457 00:46:54,670 --> 00:46:56,103 (GROANING) 458 00:46:56,750 --> 00:46:58,069 Quite right. 459 00:47:00,390 --> 00:47:03,109 At last, a male finds his partner. 460 00:47:03,190 --> 00:47:06,227 And as he does so, his call alters. 461 00:47:08,830 --> 00:47:12,664 He's indicating to her that after 17 years, 462 00:47:12,750 --> 00:47:15,742 the time has come to get down to business. 463 00:47:31,390 --> 00:47:36,145 How do these cicadas all emerge simultaneously 464 00:47:36,230 --> 00:47:38,425 after 17 long years? 465 00:47:39,070 --> 00:47:44,383 Well, we know that they can appreciate changes in the contents of tree sap 466 00:47:44,470 --> 00:47:47,667 so they are able to detect the passing of a year. 467 00:47:48,110 --> 00:47:50,863 But how do they count up to 17? 468 00:47:50,950 --> 00:47:52,941 We have no idea. 469 00:47:53,030 --> 00:47:54,782 But even if we did, 470 00:47:54,870 --> 00:47:58,499 this surely would remain one of the most astonishing, 471 00:47:58,590 --> 00:48:01,582 amazing events in the insect world. 472 00:48:01,670 --> 00:48:06,664 And it will all be over in a couple of weeks for another 17 years.