How thin, delicate butterfly wings keep from overheating

Living parts such as veins have protective structures that keep them cooler than dead scales

Living parts of butterfly wings — including veins and pheromone-releasing scent patches — have special structures that help those areas release more heat than surrounding scales. Brighter areas in these infrared images correspond to higher heat release.

Nanfang Yu and Cheng-Chia Tsai

Delicate butterfly wings are pretty cool — literally, thanks to special structures that protect them from overheating in the sun.  

New thermal images of butterflies show that living parts of the wing — including veins transporting insect blood, or hemolymph, and scent patches or pads that males use to release pheromones — release more heat than surrounding dead scales, keeping the living areas cooler.

Small changes in body temperature can affect a butterfly’s ability to fly, as muscles in the thorax must be warm so that the insect can flap its wings fast enough for takeoff. But because the wings are so thin, they heat up faster than the thorax and can rapidly overheat.

People might think that scale-covered butterfly wings are “like a fingernail, or a feather of a bird, or human hair — they are lifeless,” says Nanfang Yu, an applied physicist at Columbia University (SN: 5/23/08). But wings are also equipped with living tissues crucial for survival and flight, and high temperatures will make the insect “really feel uncomfortable.”

thermal imaging of butterfly wings
A thick layer of chitin over butterfly wing veins and scent patches, plus nanostructures in the patches, gives the tissues higher emissivity than the surrounding area (middle), meaning they release more heat and are consequently cooler (right).Nanfang Yu and Cheng-Chia Tsai
thermal imaging of butterfly wings
A thick layer of chitin over butterfly wing veins and scent patches, plus nanostructures in the patches, gives the tissues higher emissivity than the surrounding area (middle), meaning they release more heat and are consequently cooler (right).Nanfang Yu and Cheng-Chia Tsai

Butterfly wings’ thin, semitransparent nature has made it difficult for thermal infrared cameras to distinguish heat from the wing versus from background sources. So Yu and colleagues employed an infrared hyperspectral imaging technique to measure wing temperature and heat emissivity at single-scale resolution for more than 50 butterfly species.

Tube-shaped nanostructures and a thicker layer of chitin, a component of an insect’s exoskeleton, radiate excess heat from living wing tissue, the researchers report January 28 in Nature Communications. Wing veins are covered with that thicker chitin layer, and scent pads have those nanostructures, plus the extra chitin. Thicker or hollow materials are better at radiating heat than thin, solid materials, Yu says.

Those structures protect a wing only up to a point, prompting a butterfly to move away from intense light if it gets too warm. When the researchers beamed a laser on the wing’s scales, the temperature went up “but butterflies can’t feel it and they don’t care,” Yu says. But when the light warmed a butterfly’s veins too much, the insect would flap its wings or move away.

Butterfly wings are equipped with living structures such as veins and scent patches that release more heat than surrounding areas, helping to cool the wings down when the insect basks in the sun.

The team also discovered some butterflies have a structure that looks like a beating “heart” in their wings. It pumps hemolymph through the scent pads of male hickory hairstreak (Satyrium caryaevorus) and white M hairstreak (Parrhasius m-album) butterflies, and beats a few dozen times per minute.

A wing must be light for the insect to fly well so it’s surprising to find such a structure in the middle of it, Yu says. That it exists “can only mean that this wing heart is very important for function and health of the scent pad,” he says.

Erin I. Garcia de Jesus is a staff writer at Science News. She holds a Ph.D. in microbiology from the University of Washington and a master’s in science communication from the University of California, Santa Cruz.

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