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      Recent insights from radar studies of insect flight.

      Annual review of entomology
      Animal Migration, Animals, Flight, Animal, Insects, physiology, Radar

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          Abstract

          Radar has been used to study insects in flight for over 40 years and has helped to establish the ubiquity of several migration phenomena: dawn, morning, and dusk takeoffs; approximate downwind transport; concentration at wind convergences; layers in stable nighttime atmospheres; and nocturnal common orientation. Two novel radar designs introduced in the late 1990s have significantly enhanced observing capabilities. Radar-based research now encompasses foraging as well as migration and is increasingly focused on flight behavior and the environmental cues influencing it. Migrant moths have been shown to employ sophisticated orientation and height-selection strategies that maximize displacements in seasonally appropriate directions; they appear to have an internal compass and to respond to turbulence features in the airflow. Tracks of foraging insects demonstrate compensation for wind drift and use of optimal search paths to locate resources. Further improvements to observing capabilities, and employment in operational as well as research roles, appear feasible.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          21133761
          10.1146/annurev-ento-120709-144820

          Chemistry
          Animal Migration,Animals,Flight, Animal,Insects,physiology,Radar
          Chemistry
          Animal Migration, Animals, Flight, Animal, Insects, physiology, Radar

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