Search results for "interspecific recognition"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

Changes of species specific cuticular hydrocarbon profiles in the cockroaches Nauphoeta cinerea and Leucophaea maderae reared in heterospecific groups

1997

0013-8703 (Print) 1570-7458 (Online); The cuticular hydrocarbon profiles of the cockroaches Nauphoeta cinerea and Leucophaea maderae are species-specific when maintained in homospecific rearings. When individuals were reared in mixed species colonies, they initially remained in homospecific groups under different shelters. However, after 14 days they formed one heterospecific group with cuticular profiles showing characteristics of both species. When individuals were returned in monospecific rearings, their cuticular hydrocarbon profiles returned to species-specific ones within 3 weeks.

Chemical signatureCockroachbiologyEcologyCuticlecuticular hydrocarbonsZoologyDictyopterachemical signatureDictyopterabiology.organism_classificationChemical communicationBlaberidaeMixed speciesOxyhaloinaeartificial heterospecific coloniesInsect Sciencebiology.animalinterspecific recognitionEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsLeucophaea maderae
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Data from: I smell where you walked – how chemical cues influence movement decisions in ants

2016

Interactions between animals are not restricted to direct encounters. Frequently, individuals detect the proximity of others through cues unintentionally left by others, such as prey species assessing predation risk based on indirect predator cues. However, while the importance of indirect cues in predator–prey interactions has been intensely studied, their role in interactions among competitors, and their consequences for community structure, are little known to date. Ant communities are usually structured by aggressive interactions between competing species. Responding to cues of others should be useful to avoid competitors or discover food sources. In ants and other insects, such cues in…

interspecific interactionseavesdroppingLife sciencesTetramorium caespitumbehavioral traitMyrmica rubramedicine and health careFormica polyctenainterspecific recognitionMedicineLasius nigerchemotactile cuesFormica rufibarbiscompetitor avoidance
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