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1.
Pest Manag Sci ; 2018 Apr 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29667361

RESUMO

Enhancing cotton pest management using plant natural defenses has been described as a promising way to improve the management of crop pests. We here reviewed various studies on cotton growing systems to illustrate how an ancient technique called plant training, which includes plant topping and pruning, may contribute to this goal. Using examples from cotton crops, we show how trained plants can be brought to a state of enhanced defense that causes faster and more robust activation of their defense responses. We revisit the agricultural benefits associated with this technique in cotton crops, with a focus on its potential as a supplementary tool for integrated pest management (IPM). In particular, we examine its role in mediating plant interactions with conspecific neighboring plants, pests and associated natural enemies. We propose a new IPM tool, plant training for induced defense, which involves inducing plant defense through artificial injury. Experimental evidence from various studies shows that cotton training is a promising technique, particularly for smallholders, which can be used as part of an IPM program to significantly reduce insecticide use and to improve productivity in cotton farming. © 2018 Society of Chemical Industry.

2.
J Insect Physiol ; 79: 27-35, 2015 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26025197

RESUMO

Metabolic rate is a positive function of body weight, a rule valid for most organisms and the basis of several theories of metabolic ecology. For adult insects, however, the diversity of relationships between body mass and respiration remains unexplained. The aim of this study is to relate the respiratory metabolism of a parasitoid with body weight and foraging activity. We compared the metabolic rate of groups of starving and host-fed females of the parasitoid Eupelmus vuilleti recorded with respirometry for 7days, corresponding to the mean lifetime of starving females and over half of the lifetime of foraging females. The dynamics of carbohydrate, lipid and protein in the body of foraging females were quantified with biochemical techniques. Body mass and all body nutrients declined sharply from the first day onwards. By contrast, the CO2 produced and the O2 consumed increased steadily. Starving females showed the opposite trend, identifying foraging as the reason for the respiration increase of feeding females. Two complementary physiological processes explain the unexpected relationship between increasing metabolic rate and declining body weight. First, host hemolymph is a highly unbalanced food, and the excess nutrients (protein and carbohydrate) need to be voided, partially through excretion and partially through respiration. Second, a foraging young female produces eggs at an increasing rate during the first half of its lifetime, a process that also increases respiration. We posit that the time-varying metabolic rate contributions of the feeding and reproductive processes supplements the contribution of the structural mass and lead to the observed trend. We extend our explanations to other insect groups and discuss the potential for unification using Dynamic Energy Budget theory.


Assuntos
Vespas/metabolismo , Animais , Comportamento Apetitivo/fisiologia , Metabolismo Basal , Composição Corporal , Peso Corporal , Dióxido de Carbono/metabolismo , Besouros/parasitologia , Comportamento Alimentar , Feminino , Privação de Alimentos , Hemolinfa/metabolismo , Oogênese , Consumo de Oxigênio , Transcriptoma
3.
J Exp Biol ; 216(Pt 20): 3886-95, 2013 Oct 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24068351

RESUMO

Habitat heterogeneity that occurs within an individual's lifetime may favour the evolution of reversible plasticity. Colour reversibility has many different functions in animals, such as thermoregulation, crypsis through background matching and social interactions. However, the mechanisms underlying reversible colour changes are yet to be thoroughly investigated. This study aims to determine the environmental and hormonal factors underlying morphological colour changes in Thomisus onustus crab spiders and the biochemical metabolites produced during these changes. We quantified the dynamics of colour changes over time: spiders were kept in yellow and white containers under natural light conditions and their colour was measured over 15 days using a spectrophotometer. We also characterised the chemical metabolites of spiders changing to a yellow colour using HPLC. Hormonal control of colour change was investigated by injecting 20-hydroxyecdysone (20E) into spiders. We found that background colouration was a major environmental factor responsible for colour change in crab spiders: individuals presented with white and yellow backgrounds changed to white and yellow colours, respectively. An ommochrome precursor, 3-OH-kynurenine, was the main pigment responsible for yellow colour. Spiders injected with 20E displayed a similar rate of change towards yellow colouration as spiders kept in yellow containers and exposed to natural sunlight. This study demonstrates novel hormonal manipulations that are capable of inducing reversible colour change.


Assuntos
Meio Ambiente , Hormônios/farmacologia , Pigmentação/fisiologia , Aranhas/efeitos dos fármacos , Aranhas/fisiologia , Animais , Cor , Ecdisterona/farmacologia , Feminino , Laboratórios , Análise dos Mínimos Quadrados , Metaboloma/efeitos dos fármacos , Muda/efeitos dos fármacos , Muda/fisiologia , Pigmentação/efeitos dos fármacos , Análise de Componente Principal , Análise Espectral , Aranhas/metabolismo
4.
J Exp Biol ; 215(Pt 7): 1128-36, 2012 Apr 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22399657

RESUMO

Sit-and-wait predators have evolved several traits that increase the probability of encountering prey, including lures that attract prey. Although most crab spiders (Thomisidae) are known by their ability to change colour in order to match the background, a few use a different strategy. They are UV-reflective, creating a colour contrast against UV-absorbing flowers that is attractive for pollinators. The nature of the relationship between colour contrast and foraging success is unknown, as is how spiders trade off the potential costs and benefits of strong colour contrast. Therefore, this study investigated the relationship between spider colouration, foraging success and background colouration in a crab spider species known to lure pollinators via UV reflectance (Thomisus spectabilis). Field data revealed that spider body condition - a proxy of past foraging success - is positively related to overall colour contrast. We experimentally tested the effect of satiation and background colour on spider colour change. Throughout the experiment, spiders changed their colour contrast regardless of their food intake, suggesting that colour contrast and the UV component contributing to overall contrast are not caused by spider condition. Although spiders responded to different backgrounds by subtly changing their body colour, this did not result in colour matching. We believe that the observed variation in colour contrast and hence conspicuousness in the field, coupled with the spiders' reaction to our manipulation, could be the result of plasticity in response to prey.


Assuntos
Pigmentação/fisiologia , Polinização/fisiologia , Comportamento Predatório/fisiologia , Aranhas/fisiologia , Animais , Teorema de Bayes , Cor , Sensibilidades de Contraste/fisiologia , Comportamento Alimentar/fisiologia , Feminino , Modelos Lineares , Modelos Biológicos , Células Fotorreceptoras de Invertebrados/fisiologia , Análise Espectral
5.
PLoS One ; 6(2): e17136, 2011 Feb 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21359183

RESUMO

According to the crypsis hypothesis, the ability of female crab spiders to change body colour and match the colour of flowers has been selected because flower visitors are less likely to detect spiders that match the colour of the flowers used as hunting platform. However, recent findings suggest that spider crypsis plays a minor role in predator detection and some studies even showed that pollinators can become attracted to flowers harbouring Australian crab spider when the UV contrast between spider and flower increases. Here we studied the response of Apis mellifera honeybees to the presence of white or yellow Thomisus spectabilis Australian crab spiders sitting on Bidens alba inflorescences and also the response of honeybees to crab spiders that we made easily detectable painting blue their forelimbs or abdomen. To account for the visual systems of crab spider's prey, we measured the reflectance properties of the spiders and inflorescences used for the experiments. We found that honeybees did not respond to the degree of matching between spiders and inflorescences (either chromatic or achromatic contrast): they responded similarly to white and yellow spiders, to control and painted spiders. However spider UV reflection, spider size and spider movement determined honeybee behaviour: the probability that honeybees landed on spider-harbouring inflorescences was greatest when the spiders were large and had high UV reflectance or when spiders were small and reflected little UV, and honeybees were more likely to reject inflorescences if spiders moved as the bee approached the inflorescence. Our study suggests that only the large, but not the small Australian crab spiders deceive their preys by reflecting UV light, and highlights the importance of other cues that elicited an anti-predator response in honeybees.


Assuntos
Abelhas/fisiologia , Tamanho Corporal/fisiologia , Comportamento Predatório/fisiologia , Aranhas/anatomia & histologia , Aranhas/fisiologia , Raios Ultravioleta , Animais , Bidens/fisiologia , Cor , Ecossistema , Feminino , Flores/fisiologia , Cadeia Alimentar , Inflorescência/fisiologia , Inflorescência/efeitos da radiação , Fenômenos Ópticos , Aranhas/efeitos da radiação
6.
PLoS One ; 3(8): e2992, 2008 Aug 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18714343

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: It is normally thought that deep corolla tubes evolve when a plant's successful reproduction is contingent on having a corolla tube longer than the tongue of the flower's pollinators, and that pollinators evolve ever-longer tongues because individuals with longer tongues can obtain more nectar from flowers. A recent model shows that, in the presence of pollinators with long and short tongues that experience resource competition, coexisting plant species can diverge in corolla-tube depth, because this increases the proportion of pollen grains that lands on co-specific flowers. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We have extended the model to study whether resource competition can trigger the co-evolution of tongue length and corolla-tube depth. Starting with two plant and two pollinator species, all of them having the same distribution of tongue length or corolla-tube depth, we show that variability in corolla-tube depth leads to divergence in tongue length, provided that increasing tongue length is not equally costly for both species. Once the two pollinator species differ in tongue length, divergence in corolla-tube depth between the two plant species ensues. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Co-evolution between tongue length and corolla-tube depth is a robust outcome of the model, obtained for a wide range of parameter values, but it requires that tongue elongation is substantially easier for one pollinator species than for the other, that pollinators follow a near-optimal foraging strategy, that pollinators experience competition for resources and that plants experience pollination limitation.


Assuntos
Evolução Biológica , Mariposas/anatomia & histologia , Orchidaceae/anatomia & histologia , Pólen/fisiologia , Polinização/fisiologia , Seleção Genética , Língua/anatomia & histologia , Animais , Mariposas/genética , Orchidaceae/parasitologia , Orchidaceae/fisiologia , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Especificidade da Espécie
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