Search results for "Animal Distribution"

showing 2 items of 52 documents

Northward range expansion requires synchronization of both overwintering behaviour and physiology with photoperiod in the invasive Colorado potato be…

2014

Abstract. Photoperiodic phenological adaptations are prevalent in many organisms living in seasonal environments. As both photoperiod and growth season length change with latitude, species undergoing latitudinal range expansion often need to synchronize their life cycle with a changing photoperiod and growth season length. Since adaptive synchronization often involves a large number of time-consuming genetic changes, behavioural plasticity might be a faster way to adjust to novel conditions. We compared behavioural and physiological traits in overwintering (diapause) preparation in three latitudinally different European Colorado potato beetle (Leptinotarsa decemlineata) populations reared u…

coleopteraRange (biology)AcclimatizationPhotoperiodPopulationDiapauseEnvironmentDiapause InsectAnimalseducationLeptinotarsaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsOverwinteringphotoperiodismeducation.field_of_studymetabolic ratebiologyBehavior AnimalEcologyPhenologyColorado potato beetlelatitudebiology.organism_classificationColeopteraEuropediapauseLinear Modelsbehavioural plasticitySeasonsIntroduced SpeciesAnimal Distribution
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Geotomus granulosus, a peculiar sehirine-like new species of the subfamily Cydninae (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Cydnidae) from Burundi

2022

Geotomus granulosus sp. n. is described from Burundi, and is the third burrower bug species recorded hitherto from this country. This burrower bug resembles species of two Sehirinae genera, i.e. Ochetostethus Fieber, 1860 and Ochetostethomorpha Schumacher, 1913, in its dorsal body habitus. However, all its crucial diagnostic characters (the body chaetotaxy, the shape of evaporatoria and the peritreme, the meso- and metathoracic wings venation, and the shape of spermatheca) demonstrate it represents the genus Geotomus Mulsant et Rey, 1866 (subfamily Cydninae, tribe Geotomini sensu lato).
  

new speciesGeotomini sensu latoburrower bugsBurundiHemipteraHeteropterataxonomyAfrotropical RegionGeotomusAnimalsAnimal Science and ZoologyCydnidaeAnimal DistributionEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsZootaxa
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