High-resolution stacked image of the blowfly wing and thorax. The translucent wing attaches via an intricate hinge system to the muscular thorax that powers rapid wingbeats.
Carlos Faulquier
As a child growing up in the relative silence of a North Oxfordshire hamlet, I could sometimes hear bats overhead. On a still summer night, lying in the quiet of my bedroom, I could also make out the distinctive, high-pitched whine of a mosquito as it approached an exposed arm, guided at close range by body heat as well as by carbon dioxide and human odours. Both sounds now lie beyond what my ageing ears can detect. The relevance of that mosquito’s whine will become apparent shortly.
A paper published on 9 July 2026 in PLOS Biology by scientists from Wageningen University in the Netherlands and Aix-Marseille Université in France explains how aerodynamic constraints have channelled the evolution of flight across the Diptera — the order of insects that includes houseflies, fruit flies, mosquitoes, midges and crane flies.
The researchers examined the body and wing morphology of 133 species and recorded the hovering flight of 46 of them using high-speed stereoscopic cameras. They then used computational fluid dynamics to reconstruct the aerodynamic forces and energy costs associated with their wing movements.
They found that wing shape varied considerably and was strongly influenced by evolutionary ancestry, but that wingbeat movements were broadly conserved across most of the order. Despite the enormous diversity of dipterans in size, appearance, habitat and ecology, most have evolved strikingly similar flight mechanics because the physical requirements of remaining airborne restrict the range of workable solutions.
Evolution, of course, depends upon heritable variation, but not every imaginable variation is viable or advantageous. A change that demands more energy without providing some compensating benefit is unlikely to spread through a population. Natural selection therefore tends to channel evolution towards a comparatively narrow range of effective solutions. In this case, the need to generate sufficient lift while limiting aerodynamic power consumption has produced a broadly shared flight pattern across most dipterans.
It must be galling for those few creationists who can read and understand scientific papers, yet are still eagerly awaiting the long-promised day when biologists abandon “Darwinism” and embrace creationism, to encounter paper after paper such as this one. Once again, evolutionary theory provides the accepted framework within which the observations make sense, without so much as a hint that the researchers are preparing to replace it with supernatural magic.
An enterprising creationist might nevertheless seize upon the apparent exceptions. Mosquitoes and their close relatives, the midges, do not follow the usual energy-saving pattern. Mosquitoes can beat their wings as many as 1,000 times each second, using almost three times as much aerodynamic power as similarly sized fruit flies. Crane flies also depart from the general pattern, although in the opposite direction, having evolved unusually economical flight.
Surely, the creationist might argue, if aerodynamic constraints channelled the evolution of the other flies, mosquitoes should have been constrained in precisely the same way. If an exception exists, perhaps there is something wrong with the theory.
But this objection rests on the mistaken assumption that natural selection must optimise every characteristic for a single purpose. Evolution does not produce organisms in which each structure is independently perfected. It produces compromises between competing demands, with reproductive success ultimately determining which combination of costs and benefits persists.
The researchers found that mosquitoes and midges produce disproportionately powerful sounds for insects of their size. Their rapid, low-amplitude wingbeats generate increased aerodynamic drag and require enlarged flight muscles, making flight more energetically expensive. That apparent inefficiency, however, may provide a substantial reproductive advantage because acoustic communication plays an important part in their courtship.





































