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CrowdScience

How do butterflies and moths fly?

CrowdScience

BBC

Science, Technology

4.8985 Ratings

🗓️ 25 August 2023

⏱️ 27 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

For hundreds of millions of years insects controlled the skies. Before birds, bats and pterodactyls, insects were the only creatures that had evolved the ability to fly: a miracle of physics and physiology requiring their bodies to act in coordinated ballet.

This week three separate CrowdScience listeners have been asking questions about the flight of butterflies and moths. How do they move so erratically, yet land so precisely? What makes such tiny insects such accurate flyers?

Presenter Anand Jagatia -- not the biggest fan of either butterflies or moths -- visits Butterfly Paradise at London Zoo to meet keeper Mark Tansley. Anand tries to get over his aversion by immersing himself in fluttering creatures.

He then meets insect flight expert Sanjay Sane to learn the hidden mechanics behind their aeronautical skills: the vortexes of air generated by their wings and the complex muscle architecture inside their torsos. Next, aerospace engineer Amy Lang explains how the scales on their wings reduce air resistance by clever manipulation of the air and how this function trades off against other uses of the scales: for colour, for keeping dry, and much more.

All of these abilities are put to the test during the incredible global migrations that some butterflies undertake. Gerard Talavera tells Anand how he turned previous thinking about butterfly migration across Africa on its head.

Presenter: Anand Jagatia Producer: Phil Sansom Voiceover: Kitty O’Sullivan Production Coordinator: Jonathan Harris Editor: Richard Collings

(Photo: Crowdscience presenter Anand Jagatia crouches next to a butterfly. Credit: Phil Sansom)

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Take some time for yourself with soothing classical music from the mindful mix, the Science of

0:07.0

Happiness Podcast.

0:08.0

For the last 20 years I've dedicated my career to exploring the science of living a happier more meaningful life and I want

0:14.4

to share that science with you.

0:16.1

And just one thing, deep calm with Michael Mosley.

0:19.4

I want to help you tap in to your hidden relaxation response system and open the door to that

0:25.4

calmer place within. do on this show.

0:38.0

It's a bit of a pattern isn't it?

0:41.0

I'm Anan Jagatia and me and my producer Phil are about to enter Paradise.

0:47.0

It's really warm, it's very humid as well, so we're going through these kind of big plastic curtains and then some chains.

0:53.0

Oh, my glasses are very steamy.

0:56.0

Wow, it's gorgeous in here.

0:58.0

So this is an incredibly lush and hot environment. It's a big tunnel full of plants from tropical lands.

1:07.0

There are just loads of butterflies fluttering around our heads.

1:10.0

Hi, welcome to Crowd Science from the BBC World Service.

1:13.7

Lately we've had a whole bunch of questions in the inbox about butterflies and moths.

1:18.1

There's Bill from Germany who's seen them in his garden.

1:21.1

My question is, how do butterflies that appear to fly so

1:24.4

chaotically actually managed to be precise in their targeting of flowers?

1:29.2

We also heard from Jackie in New York. How is it that something like a moth,

1:35.0

how can they fly so erratically and change directions

1:40.0

so unpredictably that I was unable to catch them by slapping my hands together

...

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