Insect Survival (insect + survival)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Effect of phenylalanine and tyrosine analogues on Bactrocera oleae Gmelin (Dipt., Tephritidae) reproduction

JOURNAL OF APPLIED ENTOMOLOGY, Issue 7 2001
E. N. Zografou
The effect of nine phenylalanine and tyrosine analogues at various concentrations upon the reproduction of adult olive fruit fly Bactrocera oleae Gmelin (Diptera, Tephritidae), was tested. Fecundity (eggs/female/day) and percentage egg hatchability was significantly reduced by the following anti-amino acids (in parentheses are indicated the antagonized amino acid): p-fluoro- DL -phenylalanine (phe), p-amino- DL - and - L -phenylalanine (tyr), 3-amino- L -tyrosine (tyr) and L -mimosine (tyr), at concentrations of 0.1, 0.25, 0.05 and 0.5% in the diet, respectively. Hatchability was also affected by two other analogues of phenylalanine and tyrosine, p-bromo- DL -phenylalanine at a concentration of 10% and m-fluoro- DL -tyrosine at a concentration of 1.5%. Insect survival was affected only by p-fluorophenylalanine and 3-amino- L -tyrosine at concentrations 0.25 and 6%, respectively. No significant differences were observed between the survival of the two sexes. Finally, ,-2-thienyl- DL -alanine (phe) and ,-methyl- DL -p-tyrosine (tyr) did not affect any of the parameters tested. Electron microscopy examination of the follicles and the egg-shell structure of eggs laid by females fed with diets containing p-amino- L -phenylalanine and 3-amino- L -tyrosine, revealed abnormalities related to the egg-shell fine structure. [source]


Long-term effects of ungulates on phytophagous insects

ECOLOGICAL ENTOMOLOGY, Issue 2 2007
JOSÉ M. GÓMEZ
Abstract 1.,Most plants interact with a diverse suite of herbivores, allowing the opportunity for the existence of positive and negative interactions between highly dissimilar organisms. However, most studies on herbivorous interactions have been performed under the assumption that they occur mainly between similar species. Consequently, ecologists are still far from a full understanding of the ecological factors that determine insect population dynamics. 2.,In this study, a 7-year field experiment was conducted that manipulated the presence of ungulates to evaluate their effects on the abundance, attack rate, and survival of four guilds of co-occurring herbivorous insects living on the same host plant: seed predators, stem borers, gall makers and sap suckers. These four guilds differed in habits and behaviour, the first three being sessile and endophytic and the last being free-living. 3.,This study shows that the abundance of all four guilds was negatively affected by ungulates. However, the effect on attack rate differed among guilds, as mammals do not affect the seed predator attack rate. Ungulates also differentially affected insect survival, ingesting only seed predators and gall makers. 4.,In summary, this study suggests that diverse mechanisms may affect different insect guilds in different ways. Therefore, competition between disparate herbivores appears to be complex and can be provoked by multiple mechanisms. [source]


Costs of cannibalism in the presence of an iridovirus pathogen of Spodoptera frugiperda

ECOLOGICAL ENTOMOLOGY, Issue 2 2006
Trevor Williams
Abstract., 1.,The costs of cannibalism were examined in larvae of Spodoptera frugiperda (J. E. Smith) (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) in the presence of conspecifics infected by a lethal invertebrate iridescent virus (IIV). The hypothesis of a positive correlation between insect density and the likelihood of disease transmission by cannibalism was examined in laboratory microcosms and a field experiment. 2.,Transmission was negligible following peroral infection of early instars with purified virus suspensions or following coprophagy of virus-contaminated faeces excreted by infected insects. In contrast, 92% of the insects that predated infected conspecifics acquired the infection and died prior to adult emergence in the laboratory. Diseased larvae were more likely to be victims of cannibalism than healthy larvae. 3.,The prevalence of cannibalism was density dependent in laboratory microcosms with a low density (10 healthy insects + one infected insect) or high density (30 healthy insects + one infected insect) of insects, and field experiments performed on maize plants infested with one or four healthy insects + one infected insect. 4.,Cannibalism in the presence of virus-infected conspecifics was highly costly to S. frugiperda; in all cases, insect survival was reduced by between ,,50% (laboratory) and ,,30% (field) in the presence of the pathogen. Contrary to expectations, the prevalence of disease was not sensitive to density because cannibalism resulted in self-thinning. As infected individuals are consumed and disappear from the population, the prevalence of disease will be determined by the timescale over which transmission can be achieved, and the rate at which individuals that have acquired an infection become themselves infectious to conspecific predators. [source]


Circadian rhythms and the evolution of photoperiodic timing in insects

PHYSIOLOGICAL ENTOMOLOGY, Issue 4 2009
DAVID S. SAUNDERS
Abstract. This review discusses possible evolutionary trends in insect photoperiodism, mainly from a chronobiological perspective. A crucial step was the forging of a link between the hormones regulating diapause and the systems of biological rhythms, circadian or circannual, which have independently evolved in eukaryotes to synchronize physiology and behaviour to the daily cycles of light and darkness. In many of these responses a central feature is that the circadian system resets to a constant phase at the beginning of the subjective night, and then ,measures' the duration of the next scotophase. In ,external coincidence', one version of such a clock, light now has a dual role. First, it serves to entrain the circadian system to the stream of pulses making up the light/dark cycle and, second, it regulates the nondiapause/diapause switch in development by illuminating/not illuminating a specific light sensitive phase falling at the end of the critical night length. Important work by A. D. Lees on the aphid Megoura viciae using so-called ,night interruption experiments' demonstrates that pulses falling early in the night lead to long-day effects that are reversible by a subsequent dark period longer than the critical night length and also show maximal sensitivity in the blue,green range of the spectrum. Pulses falling in the latter half of the night, however, produce long-day effects that are irreversible by a subsequent long-night and show a spectral sensitivity extending into the red. With movement to higher latitudes, insects develop genetic clines in various parameters, including critical night length, the number of long-night cycles needed for diapause induction, the strength of the response, and the ,depth' or intensity of the diapause thus induced. Evidence for these and other types of photoperiodic response suggests that they provided strong selective advantages for insect survival. [source]