Search results for " Insect"

showing 10 items of 280 documents

Natural enemies emerging in cereal fields in spring may contribute to biological control

2022

1.Biological pest control is known to depend on landscape heterogeneity. However, such relationship shows irregular pattern and seems influenced by local farming practices and natural enemies that overwinter within crop fields. The objective of this study was to assess the contribution of emerging natural enemies in spring to biological control, and their response to the interaction between landscape heterogeneity and farming intensity. 2.We monitored the overwintering insect community using emergence traps and measured the local potential pest predation using prey cards in 30 cereal fields, in spring in France. Study fields were selected along a landscape heterogeneity gradient and farming…

maaperähyötyhyönteisetpotential predationtorjunta-aineetForestryairborne compartmentluonnon monimuotoisuuspeltoviljelyoverwinteringtalvehtiminenbeneficial insectsground compartmentInsect Sciencelandscape heterogeneitysoil managementAgronomy and Crop Sciencepesticidebiologinen torjuntaAgricultural and Forest Entomology
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Data from: Collective defence portfolios of ant hosts shift with social parasite pressure

2014

Host defences become increasingly costly as parasites breach successive lines of defence. Because selection favours hosts that successfully resist parasitism at the lowest possible cost, escalating coevolutionary arms races are likely to drive host defence portfolios towards ever more expensive strategies. We investigated the interplay between host defence portfolios and social parasite pressure by comparing 17 populations of two Temnothorax ant species. When successful, collective aggression not only prevents parasitation but also spares host colonies the cost of searching for and moving to a new nest site. However, once parasites breach the host's nest defence, host colonies should resort…

medicine and health carehost-parasite interactionsProtomognathus americanussocial insectsTemnothorax curvispinosusbrood parasitesdefence portfoliosMedicineTemnothorax longispinosusLife sciencesfrontline defences
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Data from: Fitness costs of worker specialisation for ant societies

2015

Division of labour is of fundamental importance for the success of societies, yet little is known about how individual specialization affects the fitness of the group as a whole. While specialized workers may be more efficient in the tasks they perform than generalists, they may also lack the flexibility to respond to rapid shifts in task needs. Such rigidity could impose fitness costs when societies face dynamic and unpredictable events, such as an attack by socially parasitic slavemakers. Here, we experimentally assess the colony-level fitness consequences of behavioural specialization in Temnothorax longispinosus ants that are attacked by the slavemaker ant T. americanus. We manipulated …

medicine and health caresocial insectsbehavioural specialisationslavemaker antscolony fitnessMedicineTemnothorax longispinosusDivision of labourdynamic conditionsLife sciences
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Data from: The parasite’s long arm: a tapeworm parasite induces behavioural changes in uninfected group members of its social host

2015

Parasites can induce alterations in host phenotypes in order to enhance their own survival and transmission. Parasites of social insects might not only benefit from altering their individual hosts, but also from inducing changes in uninfected group members. Temnothorax nylanderi ant workers infected with the tapeworm Anomotaenia brevis are known to be chemically distinct from nestmates and do not contribute to colony fitness, but are tolerated in their colonies and well cared-for. Here, we investigated how infected workers affect colony aggression by manipulating the presence of tapeworm-infected workers and analysing whether their absence or presence resulted in behavioural alterations in …

medicine and health caresocial insectsextended phenotypeaggressionLife SciencesMedicinerecognitionparasite-induced alterations
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Data from: Gene expression is more strongly associated with behavioural specialisation than with age or fertility in ant workers

2018

The ecological success of social insects is based on division of labour, not only between queens and workers, but also among workers. Whether a worker tends the brood or forages is influenced by age, fertility and nutritional status, with brood carers being younger, more fecund and more corpulent. Here, we experimentally disentangle behavioural specialisation from age and fertility in Temnothorax longispinosus ant workers and analyse how these parameters are linked to whole-body gene expression. A total of 3644 genes were associated with behavioural specialisation which is ten times more than associated with age and 50 times more than associated with fertility. Brood carers were characteriz…

medicine and health caresocial insectsfungibehavior and behavior mechanismsLife SciencesMedicineTemnothorax longispinosusDivision of labourRNAseqreproductive and urinary physiology
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Software/Hardware Issues in Modelling Insect Brain Architecture

2011

The concept of cognitive abilities is commonly associated to humans and animals like mammals, birds and others. Nevertheless, in the last years several research groups have intensified the studies on insects that posses a much simpler brain structure even if they are able to show interesting memory and learning capabilities. In this paper a survey on some key results obtained in a joint research activity among Engineers and Neurogeneticians is reported. They were focussed toward the design and implementation of a model of the insect brain inspired by the Drosophila melanogaster. Particular attention was paid to the main neural centers the Mushroom Bodies and the Central Complex. Moreover a …

melanogasterStructure (mathematical logic)Engineeringhybrid robotbusiness.industryController (computing)Insect brain; Drosophila; melanogaster; hybrid robot; dynamic simulationinsect brainCognitionDrosophila melanogasterSoftwareEmbodied cognitionKey (cryptography)RobotDrosophiladynamic simulationArchitecturebusinessComputer hardwareinsect brain; hybrid robot; Insect brain Drosophila melanogaster
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Aportaciones al conocimiento de los mosquitos (Diptera, Culicidae) de alta montaña presentes en la Península Ibérica

2009

Several larval samplings of mosquitoes (Diptera, Culicidae) in different mountainous regions of the peninsular Spain were carried out. A total of 2796 specimens belonging to 18 species were collected, nevertheless the 72.5 % of these finds includes only three of them (Cx. hortensis hortensis, Cx. pipiens and Cs. longiareolata). The adaptation capacity to a varied typology of water bodies together with the marked multivoltinism that characterizes their biotic cycles are postulated as two of the principal reasons that explain their abundances. The altitudinal distribution as well as some information about the bioecology of all the species captured are also exposed.

mosquitosUNESCO::CIENCIAS DE LA VIDA::Biología de insectos (Entomología)Ecology:CIENCIAS DE LA VIDA::Biología de insectos (Entomología) [UNESCO]distribución altitudinalPenínsula IbéricaBiodiversidadbiodiversidadCulicidae; mosquitoes; biodiversity; Iberian Peninsula; altitudinal distributionCulicidaelcsh:QH540-549.5Mosquitoslcsh:EcologyCulicidae; mosquitos; biodiversidad; Península Ibérica; distribución altitudinalQH540-549.5Distribución altitudinalaltitudinal distributionmosquitoesbiodiversityIberian PeninsulaPirineos: Revista de Ecología de Montaña
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Muscleblind, BSF and TBPH are mislocalized in the muscle sarcomere of a Drosophila myotonic dystrophy model

2012

SummaryMyotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1) is a genetic disease caused by the pathological expansion of a CTG trinucleotide repeat in the 3' UTR of the DMPK gene. In the DMPK transcripts, the CUG expansions sequester RNA-binding proteins into nuclear foci, including transcription factors and alternative splicing regulators such as MBNL1. MBNL1 sequestration has been associated with key features of DM1. However, the basis behind a number of molecular and histological alterations in DM1 remain unclear. To help identify new pathogenic components of the disease, we carried out a genetic screen using a Drosophila model of DM1 that expresses 480 interrupted CTG repeats, i(CTG)480, and a collection of…

musculoskeletal diseasesSarcomerescongenital hereditary and neonatal diseases and abnormalitiesNeuroscience (miscellaneous)lcsh:MedicineMedicine (miscellaneous)RNA-binding proteinGenes InsectBiologyMyotonic dystrophyGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyAnimals Genetically Modifiedchemistry.chemical_compoundImmunology and Microbiology (miscellaneous)RNA interferencelcsh:PathologymedicineMBNL1AnimalsDrosophila ProteinsHumansMyotonic DystrophyGeneticsMuscleslcsh:RAlternative splicingNuclear ProteinsRNA-Binding ProteinsEpistasis Geneticmedicine.diseaseDisease Models AnimalchemistryGene Knockdown TechniquesDrosophilaFemaleRNA InterferenceTrinucleotide repeat expansionTrinucleotide Repeat ExpansionDrosophila Proteinlcsh:RB1-214Genetic screenResearch ArticleDisease Models & Mechanisms
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Biological Activity of Extracts from Artemisia arborescens (Vaill.)L.: An Overview about Insecticidal, Antimicrobial, Antifungal and Herbicidal Prope…

2016

Following their evolutionary process, many plants have oriented their secondary metabolism towards the production of complex molecules, which often show an apparent protective function against pests (insects, fungi, viruses, but also competing plants). The identification and the study of such compounds could play a significant role in the frame of the development of new techniques for sustainable plant protection, where they could help in achieving the goal of a reduction in the use of the most highly-impact chemicals. The Mediterranean basin, with its very large biodiversity, represents a huge reservoir of highly promising plant material, which is scarcely explored as far. Indeed, prelimin…

natural insecticidebiocidal activityArtemisia arborescennatural herbicidesnatural fungicideSettore AGR/02 - Agronomia E Coltivazioni Erbacee
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Northern Drosophila montana flies show variation both within and between cline populations in the critical day length evoking reproductive diapause

2013

Reproductive diapause, and its correct timing, plays an important role in the life cycle of many insect species living in a seasonally varying environment at high latitudes. In the present paper we have documented variation in the critical day length (CDL) for adult reproductive diapause and the steepness of photoperiodic response curves (PPRCs) in seven clinal populations of Drosophila montana in Finland between the latitudes 61 and 67°N, paying special attention to variation in these traits within and between cline populations. The isofemale lines representing these populations showed a sharp transition from 0% to 100% in females' diapause incidence in the shortening day lengths, indicate…

photoperiodismeducation.field_of_studyCalendar datePhysiologyEcologyPhotoperiodReproductionPopulationGenetic VariationCline (biology)DiapauseBiologyCold ClimateDiapause Insectbiology.organism_classificationInsect ScienceGenetic variationAnimalsta1181DrosophilaFemaleAdaptationeducationDrosophilaJournal of Insect Physiology
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