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Did you know that the fastest runner among insects, the Australian tiger beetle *Cicindela hudsoni*, can cover 2.5 meters per second? In human-sized terms, that's equivalent to 770 kilometers per hour! It literally races, blinding itself for a split second. Dragonflies, especially species like the great hawk moth (*Anax imperator*), set records in the air, reaching speeds of up to 60 kilometers per hour. Hawk moths are no slouch: some, like the Madagascar sphinx hawk moth, fly at speeds of up to 53 kilometers per hour. But the absolute champion in flight speed is considered to be the botfly. Although this is a matter of debate, one specimen of the species *Cephenemyia pratti* was recorded flying at 145 kilometers per hour. That's faster than the speed limit in most cities! It's not just the speed of insect movement that amazes. Chironomidae flap their wings at an incredible rate of up to 1,000 times per second—the fastest flapping flight in the insect world, creating their characteristic hum. From the racing speeds of beetles to the super-fast flapping of wings, the insect world is full of astonishing records. Their incredible adaptations to survival continue to amaze scientists, revealing marvels of natural engineering right beneath our feet and above our heads.