Search results for "beetle"

showing 10 items of 138 documents

Sublethal Pyrethroid Insecticide Exposure Carries Positive Fitness Effects Over Generations in a Pest Insect

2019

AbstractStress tolerance and adaptation to stress are known to facilitate species invasions. Many invasive species are also pests and insecticides are used to control them, which could shape their overall tolerance to stress. It is well-known that heavy insecticide usage leads to selection of resistant genotypes but less is known about potential effects of mild sublethal insecticide usage. We studied whether stressful, sublethal pyrethroid insecticide exposure has within-generational and/or maternal transgenerational effects on fitness-related traits in the Colorado potato beetle (Leptinotarsa decemlineata) and whether maternal insecticide exposure affects insecticide tolerance of offspring…

Male0301 basic medicineInsecticidesOffspringScienceEvolutionary ecologyinsektisiditArticleInsecticide ResistanceToxicology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinetuhohyönteisetPyrethrinsAnimalsvieraslajitLeptinotarsaspecies invasionssopeutuminenLarvaMultidisciplinaryInvasive speciesstress tolerancebiologyQColorado potato beetleRkoloradonkuoriainenstressi15. Life on landPesticidebiology.organism_classificationresistenssiColeopteraPupa030104 developmental biologyLarvaMedicineFemalePEST analysisAdaptationIntroduced Speciesadaptation to stress030217 neurology & neurosurgeryScientific Reports
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Males influence maternal effects that promote sexual selection: a quantitative genetic experiment with dung beetles Onthophagus taurus

2003

J.S.K. was funded by the Academy of Finland, L.W.S. by the Australian Research Council, J.H. by an Australian Postgraduate Award, and J.L.T. by a postdoctoral research fellowship from the University of Western Australia. Recently, doubt has been cast on studies supporting good genes sexual selection by the suggestion that observed genetic benefits for offspring may be confounded by differential maternal allocation. In traditional analyses, observed genetic sire effects on offspring phenotype may result from females allocating more resources to the offspring of attractive males. However, maternal effects such as differential allocation may represent a mechanism promoting genetic sire effects…

MaleDifferential-allocationOffspringMaternal effectsQH301 BiologyCondition dependenceevoluutioseksuaalivalintaOnthophagus taurusScarabaeidaeCoefficient of additive genetic varianceAcuminatus coleopteraFluctuating asymmetryHeritabilityDifferential allocationQH301Alternative reproductive tacticsGenetic variationAnimalsSex RatioSelection GeneticEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsCallosobruchus-maculatus coleopteraLek paradoxGeneticsbiologyFluctuating asymmetrySireMaternal effectGenetic VariationHeritabilitybiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionColeopteraIndirect genetic effectsEvolutionary biologySexual selectionBruchid beetleBody ConstitutionFemaleFemale fecundity
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Transcriptomes of parents identify parenting strategies and sexual conflict in a subsocial beetle

2015

This work was funded by UK NERC grants to M.G.R. and A.J.M. an NERC studentship to D.J.P. the University of Georgia and a US NSF grant to A.J.M. and M.G.R. Parenting in the burying beetle Nicrophorus vespilloides is complex and, unusually, the sex and number of parents that can be present is flexible. Such flexibility is expected to involve specialized behaviour by the two sexes under biparental conditions. Here, we show that offspring fare equally well regardless of the sex or number of parents present. Comparing transcriptomes, we find a largely overlapping set of differentially expressed genes in both uniparental and biparental females and in uniparental males including vitellogenin, ass…

MaleNicrophorus-vespilloidesQH301 BiologyGeneral Physics and AstronomySexual conflictSexual Behavior AnimalSocial-Behaviorparenting strategiesFeeding-behaviorMatingR2Cmedia_commonGeneticskovakuoriaisetMultidisciplinarybiologyFlexibility (personality)Nicrophorus vespilloidesbeetlesNicrophorus vespilloidesColeopteraEvolutionary transitionsBurying beetleFemaleErratumReproductionJuvenile-hormoneHoney-beeBDCOffspringmedia_common.quotation_subjectMolecular Sequence DataGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyQH301Penduline titsAnimalsLife-historySocial BehaviorDrosophila takeout geneQLGene Expression Profilingta1184General ChemistryQL Zoologybiology.organism_classificationEvolutionary biologysexual conflictta1181TranscriptomePaternal careBurying beetles
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Intralocus tactical conflict: Genetic correlations between fighters and sneakers of the dung beetle Onthophagus taurus

2015

Males and females differ in their phenotypic optima for many traits, and as the majority of genes are expressed in both sexes, some alleles can be beneficial to one sex but harmful to the other (intralocus sexual conflict; ISC). ISC theory has recently been extended to intrasexual dimorphisms, where certain alleles may have opposite effects on the fitness of males of different morphs that employ alternative reproductive tactics (intralocus tactical conflict; ITC). Here, we use a half-sib breeding design to investigate the genetic basis for ISC and ITC in the dung beetle Onthophagus taurus. We found positive heritabilities and intersexual genetic correlations for almost all traits investigat…

MaleQuantitative geneticsQuantitative Trait LociOnthophagus taurusConditional strategyPhenotypic plasticityIntralocus sexual conflictGenetic correlationPolyphenismAlternative reproductive tacticsAnimalsSelection GeneticAlleleEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsHornsDung beetleSex CharacteristicsPhenotypic plasticityBehavior AnimalbiologyEcologyPolyphenismQuantitative geneticsbiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionMale dimorphismColeopteraEvolutionary biologyIntrasexual dimorphismta1181FemaleJournal of Evolutionary Biology
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Chromosome Analysis and rDNA FISH in The Stag Beetle Dorcus Parallelipipedus L. (Coleoptera: Scarabaeoidea: Lucanidae)

2001

In the present work the chromosome complement (2n = 18; 8AA + XY) of the stag beetle Dorcus parallelipipedus L. (Scarabaeoidea: Lucanidae) is analyzed using conventional Giemsa staining, banding techniques and ribosomal fluorescent in situ hybridization (rDNA FISH). rDNA FISH remains the unique tool for providing a clear-cut identification of Nucleolar Organizer Regions (NORs) when conventional banding methods such as silver- and CMA3-staining proved to be inadequate. The dull, homogeneous CMA3 fluorescence of all chromosomes indicates the absence of markedly GC rich compartmentalized regions in D. parallelipipedus genome. Silver impregnation inadequacy in detecting NOR regions is to be sou…

MaleSilver StainingStag beetleZoologyScarabaeoideaDNA RibosomalChromosomesGiemsa stainHeterochromatinNucleolus Organizer RegionGeneticsAnimalsRibosomal DNAIn Situ Hybridization FluorescenceGeneticsbiologyChromosomeGeneral MedicineDorcus parallelipipedusRibosomal RNAbiology.organism_classificationChromosome BandingColeopteraKaryotypingFemaleNucleolus organizer regionHereditas
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Resting metabolic rate can vary with age independently from body mass changes in the Colorado potato beetle, Leptinotarsa decemlineata.

2009

Temperature and mass dependency of insect metabolic rates are well known, while less attention has been given to other factors, such as age. Among insect species that experience seasonal variation in environmental conditions, such as in temperate latitudes, age may also have indirect effects on the metabolic rate. We examined the effect of age on the resting metabolic rate of Leptinotarsa decemlineata during 11 days after adult emergence by using flow-through respirometry. Age had a significant mass-independent effect on metabolic rate of beetles. A twofold increase in metabolic rate occurred during the first 2 days of adult life after which metabolic rate decreased with age relatively slow…

MaleTime FactorsPhysiologyEcologymedia_common.quotation_subjectColorado potato beetleZoologyInsectDiapauseBiologybiology.organism_classificationColeopteraRespirometrySex FactorsInsect ScienceBasal metabolic rateTemperate climateAnimalsBody SizeFemaleSeasonsLeptinotarsaOverwinteringmedia_commonJournal of insect physiology
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Matters of scale: positive allometry and the evolution of male dimorphisms

2005

J.L.T. was funded by a Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council research fellowship, J.S.K. by the Academy of Finland, and N.R.L. by a Natural Environment Research Council research fellowship. The developmental independence of alternative phenotypes is key to evolutionary theories of phenotypic plasticity and the origins of diversity. Male dimorphisms associated with alternative reproductive tactics are widely cited examples of such facultative expression of divergent fitness optima. Current models for the evolution of male dimorphisms invoke a size-dependent threshold at which the phenotype is reprogrammed. We use predictions derived from allometric modeling to test for the e…

MaleTrade-offsThreshold evolutionQH301 BiologyCondition dependenceevoluutioOnthophagus taurusTrade-offScarabaeidaeTrade-offPolyphenic beetleForficula auriculariaQH301Hormonal-controlPolyphenismSizeAnimalsBody SizeOnthophagus-acuminatus coleopteraEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhenotypic plasticitySex CharacteristicsbiologyEcologyPolyphenismImaginal diskbiology.organism_classificationTraitsBiological EvolutionColeopteraPhenotypeSexual selectionEvolutionary biologyEarwigSexual selectionJuvenile hormoneFemaleAllometryHorn length dimorphism
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Pharmacogenomics of cantharidin in tumor cells.

2014

Cantharis vesicatoria (blister beetle) is used in Chinese medicine and has been categorized as highly toxic in the Chinese pharmacopeia. In Europe, Cantharis patches have been used since ages to treat various skin-related diseases. We investigated the cytotoxicity of the Cantharis ingredient, cantharidin, in 41 tumor cell lines (Oncotest panel) and compared the results with those of 60 cell lines of the National Cancer Institute, USA. We found profound activity at low micromolar concentrations (log ₁₀IC₅₀ values between -6.980 and 5.009 M). Cantharidin bound to protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) with higher affinity (-8.12 kcal/mol) than to PP1 (-6.25 kcal/mol) in molecular docking analyses. Usi…

Models MolecularProtein ConformationBlister beetleBiologyCantharisBiochemistryFas ligandGene Expression Regulation Enzymologicchemistry.chemical_compoundCell Line TumorGene expressionAnimalsHumansRNA MessengerCytotoxicityOligonucleotide Array Sequence AnalysisPharmacologyCantharidinBinding SitesMolecular Structurebiology.organism_classificationMolecular biologyReceptors Neuropeptide YchemistryCell cultureApoptosisPharmacogeneticsImmunologyCantharidinBiochemical pharmacology
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Analysing disparity by applying combined morphological and molecular approaches to French and Japanese carabid beetles

2000

The expression of morphological disparity within a clade is related to its history and to the environmental parameters within which it develops. Recent developments in geometric morphometries allow quantitative estimation of morphological disparity, and facilitate comparisons with genetic data intended to provide phylogenetic information. Such comparisons were made between two sets of ground beetle species from regions that differ biogeographically and environmentally: 12 post-glacial reinvading species from NE France; and 15 Japanese species less likely to be affected by the Pleistocene glacial events. Genetic relationships were inferred from mitochondrial DNA (ND5 gene). Morphological div…

MonophylyGround beetlePhylogenetic treebiologyPleistoceneEcologyBiodiversityMorphology (biology)Context (language use)Cladebiology.organism_classificationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsBiological Journal of the Linnean Society
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Morphological variability in and distributional data on phaleria bimaculata populations from islands of the central mediterranean area

2011

This study aimed to collect new taxonomic and distribution data on Phaleria bimaculata (L.) (Coleoptera Tenebrionidae) from Sicily (southern Italy), the circum-Sicilian islands and the Maltese archipelago. Particular attention was paid to the diagnostic morphological features observed in the populations sampled, focusing on the subspecies Phaleria bimaculata marcuzzii Aliquò. P. bimaculata individuals were collected from 20 different locations, of which 2 were located in the Sicilian mainland, 9 in circum-Sicilian islands and 9 in the Maltese Islands. In addition, four Phaleria acuminata Kuster populations were also recorded along southern Sicilian shores. The two Phaleria species were neve…

Phaleria bimaculata P. bimaculata marcuzzii sandy beaches Central Mediterranean morphology Geometric morphometricsThymelaeaceae -- Mediterranean RegionBeaches -- Mediterranean RegionTenebrionidae -- Mediterranean RegionSettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaBeetles -- Mediterranean Region
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