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256 pages, Hardcover
First published September 1, 2014
By the time insects evolved, the niches of marine ecosystems were already filled by other organisms. Various mass extinctions decimated marine communities, but never so completely that the surviving marine organisms couldn’t recolonize before the insects could adapt to enter the system. Insects didn’t need to move into the already highly competitive ocean environment. They succeeded simply by being the first to colonize each new and unoccupied terrestrial niche. (p. 59)
Insects have had 360 million years to experiment with legs, but none has bothered to acquire bipedal form, or four-legged form for that matter, which is stable enough but has less potential for speed. The four-legged tetrapods were all sluggish and slow until they developed warm-blooded metabolism. Six-legged form is sublime. Fifty million insect species can’t possibly have it wrong. Eight-legged form isn’t so bad either. Just take a look at spiders, which make up thousands of species. But all in all, there doesn’t seem to be any real advantage to having eight legs; they’re nearly as good as six. (p. 61-62)
Small size also provides a breathing advantage. Smaller animals have more surface area relative to the volume of cells in the body. Therefore the very smallest insects can breathe directly through the cuticle, because they are so small and live in a very moist environment where a thick skeleton is no longer needed. But the ultimate advantage to microscopic body size is that fewer resources are needed for survival. Small animals can grow and reproduce more rapidly than large animals; therefore, they evolve faster, and they can occupy much smaller ecological niches. (p. 62-63)
