The influence of female and male cues on the male searching behavior of the sheep tick, Ixodes ri... more The influence of female and male cues on the male searching behavior of the sheep tick, Ixodes ricinus (Acari: Ixodidae), was studied under constant laboratory conditions by means of a computerized video tracking system. Males were released into an open glass arena in which one half had been exposed for 1 h to 5 freely walking unfed females or five males. The obtained track data were analyzed to reveal if male walking pattern was random or affected by cues of conspecifics left on the arena surface. The results showed that males spent significantly more time and walked a significantly longer distance in the area with female cues compared to the control area. Moreover, the walking path of males was more tortuous on the cues half than the control half. In contrast, walking behavior of males was not affected by male cues in any observed parameter. These results provide the first evidence that unfed females leave sex-specific semiochemicals on a substrate during their walk and that these cues have an effect on male searching behavior. Since this effect was not observed when female cues were 24-h old, the semiochemicals seem to either evaporate or are subject to degradation. The biological significance of these findings for mate-searching in I. ricinus males is discussed.
Abstract: Prey consumption by Typhlodromus pyri Scheuten was studied in the presence and absence... more Abstract: Prey consumption by Typhlodromus pyri Scheuten was studied in the presence and absence of apple powdery mildew, Podosphaera leucotricha (Ell. and Everh.) under constant laboratory conditions. Eggs of Tetranychus urticae Koch were offered to predatory mites as a prey. Seven densities ranging from five to 100 T. urticae eggs per arena were used. Mildew conidia (approximately 0.5 mg) were added to half of the arenas by brushing them from infected apple leaves. A single adult female of T. pyri was introduced onto each arena and number of prey eggs consumed was counted 12 h later when the predator was offered new T. urticae eggs again and the procedure was repeated once. Data showed that predators consumed in both experimental periods nearly all prey in experiments with densities up to 40 eggs per arena and no mildew. However, the number of eggs consumed decreased more than twofold when mildew conidia were supplied, even at high prey densities. Differences in predation rate between treatments with and without mildew were highly significant. The results thus indicate that availability of mildew as an alternative food can reduce prey suppression by T. pyri. Possible implications of these findings in biological control of spider mites by generalist predatory mites are discussed.
To investigate the relative contributions of bottom-up (plant condition) and top-down (predatory ... more To investigate the relative contributions of bottom-up (plant condition) and top-down (predatory mites) factors on the dynamics of the two-spotted spider mite (Tetranychus urticae), a series of experiments were conducted in which spider mites and predatory mites were released on bean plants. Plants inoculated with 2, 4, 8, 16, and 32 adult female T. urticae were either left untreated or were inoculated with 3 or 5 adult female predators (Phytoseiulus persimilis) one week after the introduction of spider mites. Plant area, densities of T. urticae and P. persimilis, and plant injury were assessed by weekly sampling. Data were analysed by a combination of statistical methods and a tri-trophic mechanistic simulation model partly parameterised from the current experiments and partly from previous data. The results showed a clear effect of predators on the density of spider mites and on the plant injury they cause. Plant injury increased with the initial number of spider mites and decreased with the initial number of predators. Extinction of T. urticae, followed by extinction of P. persimilis, was the most likely outcome for most initial combinations of prey and predators. Eggs constituted a relatively smaller part of the prey population as plant injury increased and of the predator population as prey density decreased. We did not find statistical evidence of P. persimilis having preference for feeding on T. urticae eggs. The simulation model demonstrated that bottom-up and top-down factors interact synergistically to reduce the density of spider mites. This may have important implications for biological control of spider mites by means of predatory mites.
Feeding by spider mites can cause severe injury to a host plant and lead to a decreasing per capi... more Feeding by spider mites can cause severe injury to a host plant and lead to a decreasing per capita growth rate and an increasing per capita emigration rate. Such density-dependent responses to local conditions are important in a metapopulation context because they allow the herbivores to colonize new host plants and thereby prolong the time until regional (metapopulation) extinction. In order to include density-dependent responses of the two-spotted spider mite (Tetranychus urticae) in a realistic metapopulation model, a series of greenhouse experiments was conducted with the purpose to quantify how the condition of bean plants (Phaseolus vulgaris) influences the demographic parameters of T. urticae. Plant age per se reduced the growth rate of the spider mites only slightly, whereas the growth rate declined significantly as the plants were injured by the mites. The relationships between plant condition (expressed by the plant injury index D) and the birth and loss (death + emigration) rates of the mites were quantified so as to predict population growth as a function of D. Maximum per capita growth rate (r) was estimated to be c. 0.21 day−1. The growth rate is expected to be negative when D exceeds 0.8. When mites were allowed to emigrate to neighbouring plants via bridges, the per capita emigration rate increased almost exponentially with D. The proportion of eggs in the population decreased with D while the numerical ratio between immatures to adults and the sex ratio did not change with D. Overall, immatures and adults constituted 74% and 26%, respectively, of the active mites and c. 46% of the adults were males. The bridges that connected a donor plant with the surrounding recipient plants were responsible for the majority of the emigrations from donor plants. Most mites stopped after having crossed a single bridge, but a few crossed two bridges while none crossed three bridges within 24 h. The significance of the results for biological control is discussed.
Spider mites are serious pests on many economically important plant species, because they may red... more Spider mites are serious pests on many economically important plant species, because they may reduce plant productivity and, at high mite densities, overexploit and even kill the host plants. We have conducted a series of greenhouse experiments to quantify the effects of two-spotted spider mites (Tetranychus urticae) on host plants (Phaseolusvulgaris). The average amount of chlorophyll per cm2 leaf area was used as a measure of plant condition. It was shown that chlorophyll concentration decreases with plant age and intensity of spider mite feeding. Damage caused by spider mites was assessed visually, using the Leaf Damage Index (LDI) defined by, and a mathematical relationship between the visual measurements and the amount of chlorophyll/cm2 was fitted to data. The relationship may serve as a short-cut to estimate overall plant injury, expressed as the relative loss of chlorophyll/cm2 leaf area caused by spider mites (D). D takes values between 0 (no injury) and 1 (all leaves dead). A highly significant positive relationship between the instantaneous spider mite density and D was found, even though D is expected to reflect the cumulated density of mites (mite-days). A model of plant growth incorporating information about plant age and D predicts that plant area has a maximum when plant age is about 60 days, and that plant area decreases exponentially with an increase in D.
ABSTRACT The pattern of locomotor (walking) activity was studied in adult males and females of sh... more ABSTRACT The pattern of locomotor (walking) activity was studied in adult males and females of short-winged (brachypterous) and long-winged (macropterous) morph of the flightless bug Pyrrhocoris apterus (Linnaeus) (Heteroptera: Pyrrhocoridae) under constant laboratory conditions. Walking activity was measured with a computerized video system and analysed with respect to sex, physiological status (reproduction, diapause and reproductive arrest of non-diapause type) and wing dimorphism of the bugs. The largest duration was observed in the macropterous females with reproductive arrest of non-diapause type (average 6 h per day) and the shortest duration in diapausing brachypterous females and males (average less than 2 h per day). This was reflected also in the overall time spent by walking during the first 14 days after imaginal ecdysis. The time spent by walking significantly increased in the macropterous morph as the bugs aged, whereas in diapausing brachypters the time spent by walking decreased with age. No linear relationship between walking activity and age was found in reproductive brachypterous morph. The bugs of all experimental groups moved mostly during the photophase and were almost inactive during the scotophase. Thus, walking activity in P. apterus is diurnal, irrespective of the wing morph, physiological status, sex and age. Contrary to the macropterous morph, where the locomotor activity of females during photophase was significantly higher than in males, no significant differences were found between the locomotor activities of brachypterous males and females. The observed differences in locomotor activity are discussed in relation to different roles of two wing morphs in the life history of this heteropteran.
ABSTRACT Macropterous females of Pyrrhocoris apterus (L.) reared under short-day conditions (LD 1... more ABSTRACT Macropterous females of Pyrrhocoris apterus (L.) reared under short-day conditions (LD 12:12 h) were analysed for temporal patterns of feeding and drinking behaviour, activities of digestive enzymes in the gut, and lipid and glycogen content in the haemolymph and fat body. Peaks of drinking activity were recorded at days 3, 7 and 10 during the first 14 days after imaginal ecdysis. Feeding activity peaked on the third day, ceasing completely after the fourth day of adult life. Esterase, protease, amylase and aminopeptidase activities exhibited the highest overall activity in the first days after imaginal emergence; then enzyme activities decreased. In the fat body, the content of lipids was highest on day 5, then a decrease of about 40% was observed at day 14; the amount of glycogen was highest on day 1 at 11 μg of glucose equivalents/mg of fat body, then decreased to 2 μg at day 14 after the imaginal moult. In the haemolymph, the lipid content rose until day 8 when it reached almost 0.3 μmol/μl; at day 14 the value was slightly lower. The association of fasting with reproductive arrest in macropterous females of P. apterus, accompanied by a decrease in digestive enzyme activities and a mobilization of lipid reserves from the fat body, was demonstrated.
... Correspondence: Matthias W. Lorenz,. *Correspondence: Dr Matthias W. Lorenz, Department of An... more ... Correspondence: Matthias W. Lorenz,. *Correspondence: Dr Matthias W. Lorenz, Department of Animal Ecology 1, University of Bayreuth, 95440 Bayreuth, Germany. Tel.: +49 921 55 2655; fax: +49 921 55 2784; e-mail: matthias.lorenz@uni-bayreuth.de. Publication History. ...
The aim of the present paper was to study, with the use of video-recordering and computerized met... more The aim of the present paper was to study, with the use of video-recordering and computerized methods, the flight and wing movement behavior in two wing morphs of the flightless bug Pyrrhocoris apterus during the first 14 days of their adult life. We demonstrated the capability of macropterous males and females of this heteropteran to flap their fore- and hindwings for the first time. Flight was not observed in any of the tested males and females. We revealed that wing flapping does not occur earlier than on the fourth and fifth day after adult emergence in males and females, respectively. Time-series analysis of the obtained data showed that the maximum activity of wing flaps is limited to the light phase of the 12-h light/12-h dark photocycle, with the peak occurring in the morning, i.e., about 3 h after turning the light on. No substantial differences in the peaks of wing flapping activities in males versus females were found. The present paper is the first experimental demonstration of wing flap activity in a representative species with a “nonfunctional” alary polymorphism.
Abstract. Changes in the content of adipokinetic hormone (AKH), the adipokinetic response and th... more Abstract. Changes in the content of adipokinetic hormone (AKH), the adipokinetic response and the walking activity of 10-day-old adult macropterous females of the firebug, Pyrrhocoris apterus (L.), reared under long-day (LD) photoperiod (LD 18 : 6 h) are compared with those exposed for 3 days to constant darkness (DD). Diel changes of all the parameters studied in LD females persist in females kept in constant dark. A positive correlation exists between diel changes of AKH content in the central nervous system (CNS) in the LD and DD females, and a negative correlation in the AKH level in haemolymph and walking activity. In addition, there is a positive correlation between diel changes of AKH level in haemolymph and walking activity in macropterous females reared under LD conditions, as well as in those transferred to constant darkness. The data suggest that there is some feedback between the release of AKH from CNS into the haemolymph and walking activity in macropterous females. Preliminary studies on the simultaneous expression of mRNA for the period gene and a positive reaction to an antibody against AKH in the same corpus cardiacum cells suggest that the period gene may be involved in regulating the AKH content in this gland.
Sexual attractiveness of unengorged, semiengorged and fully engorged females of both field and la... more Sexual attractiveness of unengorged, semiengorged and fully engorged females of both field and laboratory populations of Ixodes ricinus was studied under laboratory conditions by means of a computerised video tracking system. A male and a female were allowed to walk freely in a glass arena during 1 h and their behavioural interactions were observed. Obtained results revealed that the feeding status of I. ricinus females affects their sexual attractiveness. The highest attractiveness was observed in engorged females, the lowest in unengorged females of the field population. Copulation occurred in all experimental groups with the highest frequency observed in the unengorged virgin laboratory females. Despite engorged females being highly attractive for males on distance, the frequency of copulation was low. Differences between field and laboratory populations were found in both behavioural parameters and frequency of copulation.
Abstract. .Reproducing females of the firebug, Pyrrhocoris apterus (Linnaeus) (Heteroptera: Pyrrh... more Abstract. .Reproducing females of the firebug, Pyrrhocoris apterus (Linnaeus) (Heteroptera: Pyrrhocoridae), reared under long-day (LD 18:6h) photocycle (long-day females), and diapausing females reared under short-day (LD 12:12h) conditions (short-day females) were analysed for temporal patterns of feeding, drinking and gut digestive enzyme activities. In long-day females the highest activities of feeding and drinking were found at the beginning of each reproductive cycle. Significant correlation between feeding and drinking activities in both reproducing long-day females and short-day females during pre-diapause state was found. In pre-diapausing short-day females the cyclical pattern of feeding and drinking was maintained despite the inhibition of reproduction. After entering the diapause their feeding activity became very low. Analysis of five gut enzymes revealed that short-day females differ significantly from long-day females in higher protease, amylase and esterase activities, in case of lipase only at certain times of their adult life; no significant difference was found in the aminopeptidase activity. Positive correlations between intensity of feeding and gut enzyme activities were observed in short-day females. Using several protease inhibitors most protease activity in the gut of P.apterus was identified as cysteine and aspartyl proteases, and only a small part of the activity could be caused by some serine proteases.
The influence of female and male cues on the male searching behavior of the sheep tick, Ixodes ri... more The influence of female and male cues on the male searching behavior of the sheep tick, Ixodes ricinus (Acari: Ixodidae), was studied under constant laboratory conditions by means of a computerized video tracking system. Males were released into an open glass arena in which one half had been exposed for 1 h to 5 freely walking unfed females or five males. The obtained track data were analyzed to reveal if male walking pattern was random or affected by cues of conspecifics left on the arena surface. The results showed that males spent significantly more time and walked a significantly longer distance in the area with female cues compared to the control area. Moreover, the walking path of males was more tortuous on the cues half than the control half. In contrast, walking behavior of males was not affected by male cues in any observed parameter. These results provide the first evidence that unfed females leave sex-specific semiochemicals on a substrate during their walk and that these cues have an effect on male searching behavior. Since this effect was not observed when female cues were 24-h old, the semiochemicals seem to either evaporate or are subject to degradation. The biological significance of these findings for mate-searching in I. ricinus males is discussed.
Abstract: Prey consumption by Typhlodromus pyri Scheuten was studied in the presence and absence... more Abstract: Prey consumption by Typhlodromus pyri Scheuten was studied in the presence and absence of apple powdery mildew, Podosphaera leucotricha (Ell. and Everh.) under constant laboratory conditions. Eggs of Tetranychus urticae Koch were offered to predatory mites as a prey. Seven densities ranging from five to 100 T. urticae eggs per arena were used. Mildew conidia (approximately 0.5 mg) were added to half of the arenas by brushing them from infected apple leaves. A single adult female of T. pyri was introduced onto each arena and number of prey eggs consumed was counted 12 h later when the predator was offered new T. urticae eggs again and the procedure was repeated once. Data showed that predators consumed in both experimental periods nearly all prey in experiments with densities up to 40 eggs per arena and no mildew. However, the number of eggs consumed decreased more than twofold when mildew conidia were supplied, even at high prey densities. Differences in predation rate between treatments with and without mildew were highly significant. The results thus indicate that availability of mildew as an alternative food can reduce prey suppression by T. pyri. Possible implications of these findings in biological control of spider mites by generalist predatory mites are discussed.
To investigate the relative contributions of bottom-up (plant condition) and top-down (predatory ... more To investigate the relative contributions of bottom-up (plant condition) and top-down (predatory mites) factors on the dynamics of the two-spotted spider mite (Tetranychus urticae), a series of experiments were conducted in which spider mites and predatory mites were released on bean plants. Plants inoculated with 2, 4, 8, 16, and 32 adult female T. urticae were either left untreated or were inoculated with 3 or 5 adult female predators (Phytoseiulus persimilis) one week after the introduction of spider mites. Plant area, densities of T. urticae and P. persimilis, and plant injury were assessed by weekly sampling. Data were analysed by a combination of statistical methods and a tri-trophic mechanistic simulation model partly parameterised from the current experiments and partly from previous data. The results showed a clear effect of predators on the density of spider mites and on the plant injury they cause. Plant injury increased with the initial number of spider mites and decreased with the initial number of predators. Extinction of T. urticae, followed by extinction of P. persimilis, was the most likely outcome for most initial combinations of prey and predators. Eggs constituted a relatively smaller part of the prey population as plant injury increased and of the predator population as prey density decreased. We did not find statistical evidence of P. persimilis having preference for feeding on T. urticae eggs. The simulation model demonstrated that bottom-up and top-down factors interact synergistically to reduce the density of spider mites. This may have important implications for biological control of spider mites by means of predatory mites.
Feeding by spider mites can cause severe injury to a host plant and lead to a decreasing per capi... more Feeding by spider mites can cause severe injury to a host plant and lead to a decreasing per capita growth rate and an increasing per capita emigration rate. Such density-dependent responses to local conditions are important in a metapopulation context because they allow the herbivores to colonize new host plants and thereby prolong the time until regional (metapopulation) extinction. In order to include density-dependent responses of the two-spotted spider mite (Tetranychus urticae) in a realistic metapopulation model, a series of greenhouse experiments was conducted with the purpose to quantify how the condition of bean plants (Phaseolus vulgaris) influences the demographic parameters of T. urticae. Plant age per se reduced the growth rate of the spider mites only slightly, whereas the growth rate declined significantly as the plants were injured by the mites. The relationships between plant condition (expressed by the plant injury index D) and the birth and loss (death + emigration) rates of the mites were quantified so as to predict population growth as a function of D. Maximum per capita growth rate (r) was estimated to be c. 0.21 day−1. The growth rate is expected to be negative when D exceeds 0.8. When mites were allowed to emigrate to neighbouring plants via bridges, the per capita emigration rate increased almost exponentially with D. The proportion of eggs in the population decreased with D while the numerical ratio between immatures to adults and the sex ratio did not change with D. Overall, immatures and adults constituted 74% and 26%, respectively, of the active mites and c. 46% of the adults were males. The bridges that connected a donor plant with the surrounding recipient plants were responsible for the majority of the emigrations from donor plants. Most mites stopped after having crossed a single bridge, but a few crossed two bridges while none crossed three bridges within 24 h. The significance of the results for biological control is discussed.
Spider mites are serious pests on many economically important plant species, because they may red... more Spider mites are serious pests on many economically important plant species, because they may reduce plant productivity and, at high mite densities, overexploit and even kill the host plants. We have conducted a series of greenhouse experiments to quantify the effects of two-spotted spider mites (Tetranychus urticae) on host plants (Phaseolusvulgaris). The average amount of chlorophyll per cm2 leaf area was used as a measure of plant condition. It was shown that chlorophyll concentration decreases with plant age and intensity of spider mite feeding. Damage caused by spider mites was assessed visually, using the Leaf Damage Index (LDI) defined by, and a mathematical relationship between the visual measurements and the amount of chlorophyll/cm2 was fitted to data. The relationship may serve as a short-cut to estimate overall plant injury, expressed as the relative loss of chlorophyll/cm2 leaf area caused by spider mites (D). D takes values between 0 (no injury) and 1 (all leaves dead). A highly significant positive relationship between the instantaneous spider mite density and D was found, even though D is expected to reflect the cumulated density of mites (mite-days). A model of plant growth incorporating information about plant age and D predicts that plant area has a maximum when plant age is about 60 days, and that plant area decreases exponentially with an increase in D.
ABSTRACT The pattern of locomotor (walking) activity was studied in adult males and females of sh... more ABSTRACT The pattern of locomotor (walking) activity was studied in adult males and females of short-winged (brachypterous) and long-winged (macropterous) morph of the flightless bug Pyrrhocoris apterus (Linnaeus) (Heteroptera: Pyrrhocoridae) under constant laboratory conditions. Walking activity was measured with a computerized video system and analysed with respect to sex, physiological status (reproduction, diapause and reproductive arrest of non-diapause type) and wing dimorphism of the bugs. The largest duration was observed in the macropterous females with reproductive arrest of non-diapause type (average 6 h per day) and the shortest duration in diapausing brachypterous females and males (average less than 2 h per day). This was reflected also in the overall time spent by walking during the first 14 days after imaginal ecdysis. The time spent by walking significantly increased in the macropterous morph as the bugs aged, whereas in diapausing brachypters the time spent by walking decreased with age. No linear relationship between walking activity and age was found in reproductive brachypterous morph. The bugs of all experimental groups moved mostly during the photophase and were almost inactive during the scotophase. Thus, walking activity in P. apterus is diurnal, irrespective of the wing morph, physiological status, sex and age. Contrary to the macropterous morph, where the locomotor activity of females during photophase was significantly higher than in males, no significant differences were found between the locomotor activities of brachypterous males and females. The observed differences in locomotor activity are discussed in relation to different roles of two wing morphs in the life history of this heteropteran.
ABSTRACT Macropterous females of Pyrrhocoris apterus (L.) reared under short-day conditions (LD 1... more ABSTRACT Macropterous females of Pyrrhocoris apterus (L.) reared under short-day conditions (LD 12:12 h) were analysed for temporal patterns of feeding and drinking behaviour, activities of digestive enzymes in the gut, and lipid and glycogen content in the haemolymph and fat body. Peaks of drinking activity were recorded at days 3, 7 and 10 during the first 14 days after imaginal ecdysis. Feeding activity peaked on the third day, ceasing completely after the fourth day of adult life. Esterase, protease, amylase and aminopeptidase activities exhibited the highest overall activity in the first days after imaginal emergence; then enzyme activities decreased. In the fat body, the content of lipids was highest on day 5, then a decrease of about 40% was observed at day 14; the amount of glycogen was highest on day 1 at 11 μg of glucose equivalents/mg of fat body, then decreased to 2 μg at day 14 after the imaginal moult. In the haemolymph, the lipid content rose until day 8 when it reached almost 0.3 μmol/μl; at day 14 the value was slightly lower. The association of fasting with reproductive arrest in macropterous females of P. apterus, accompanied by a decrease in digestive enzyme activities and a mobilization of lipid reserves from the fat body, was demonstrated.
... Correspondence: Matthias W. Lorenz,. *Correspondence: Dr Matthias W. Lorenz, Department of An... more ... Correspondence: Matthias W. Lorenz,. *Correspondence: Dr Matthias W. Lorenz, Department of Animal Ecology 1, University of Bayreuth, 95440 Bayreuth, Germany. Tel.: +49 921 55 2655; fax: +49 921 55 2784; e-mail: matthias.lorenz@uni-bayreuth.de. Publication History. ...
The aim of the present paper was to study, with the use of video-recordering and computerized met... more The aim of the present paper was to study, with the use of video-recordering and computerized methods, the flight and wing movement behavior in two wing morphs of the flightless bug Pyrrhocoris apterus during the first 14 days of their adult life. We demonstrated the capability of macropterous males and females of this heteropteran to flap their fore- and hindwings for the first time. Flight was not observed in any of the tested males and females. We revealed that wing flapping does not occur earlier than on the fourth and fifth day after adult emergence in males and females, respectively. Time-series analysis of the obtained data showed that the maximum activity of wing flaps is limited to the light phase of the 12-h light/12-h dark photocycle, with the peak occurring in the morning, i.e., about 3 h after turning the light on. No substantial differences in the peaks of wing flapping activities in males versus females were found. The present paper is the first experimental demonstration of wing flap activity in a representative species with a “nonfunctional” alary polymorphism.
Abstract. Changes in the content of adipokinetic hormone (AKH), the adipokinetic response and th... more Abstract. Changes in the content of adipokinetic hormone (AKH), the adipokinetic response and the walking activity of 10-day-old adult macropterous females of the firebug, Pyrrhocoris apterus (L.), reared under long-day (LD) photoperiod (LD 18 : 6 h) are compared with those exposed for 3 days to constant darkness (DD). Diel changes of all the parameters studied in LD females persist in females kept in constant dark. A positive correlation exists between diel changes of AKH content in the central nervous system (CNS) in the LD and DD females, and a negative correlation in the AKH level in haemolymph and walking activity. In addition, there is a positive correlation between diel changes of AKH level in haemolymph and walking activity in macropterous females reared under LD conditions, as well as in those transferred to constant darkness. The data suggest that there is some feedback between the release of AKH from CNS into the haemolymph and walking activity in macropterous females. Preliminary studies on the simultaneous expression of mRNA for the period gene and a positive reaction to an antibody against AKH in the same corpus cardiacum cells suggest that the period gene may be involved in regulating the AKH content in this gland.
Sexual attractiveness of unengorged, semiengorged and fully engorged females of both field and la... more Sexual attractiveness of unengorged, semiengorged and fully engorged females of both field and laboratory populations of Ixodes ricinus was studied under laboratory conditions by means of a computerised video tracking system. A male and a female were allowed to walk freely in a glass arena during 1 h and their behavioural interactions were observed. Obtained results revealed that the feeding status of I. ricinus females affects their sexual attractiveness. The highest attractiveness was observed in engorged females, the lowest in unengorged females of the field population. Copulation occurred in all experimental groups with the highest frequency observed in the unengorged virgin laboratory females. Despite engorged females being highly attractive for males on distance, the frequency of copulation was low. Differences between field and laboratory populations were found in both behavioural parameters and frequency of copulation.
Abstract. .Reproducing females of the firebug, Pyrrhocoris apterus (Linnaeus) (Heteroptera: Pyrrh... more Abstract. .Reproducing females of the firebug, Pyrrhocoris apterus (Linnaeus) (Heteroptera: Pyrrhocoridae), reared under long-day (LD 18:6h) photocycle (long-day females), and diapausing females reared under short-day (LD 12:12h) conditions (short-day females) were analysed for temporal patterns of feeding, drinking and gut digestive enzyme activities. In long-day females the highest activities of feeding and drinking were found at the beginning of each reproductive cycle. Significant correlation between feeding and drinking activities in both reproducing long-day females and short-day females during pre-diapause state was found. In pre-diapausing short-day females the cyclical pattern of feeding and drinking was maintained despite the inhibition of reproduction. After entering the diapause their feeding activity became very low. Analysis of five gut enzymes revealed that short-day females differ significantly from long-day females in higher protease, amylase and esterase activities, in case of lipase only at certain times of their adult life; no significant difference was found in the aminopeptidase activity. Positive correlations between intensity of feeding and gut enzyme activities were observed in short-day females. Using several protease inhibitors most protease activity in the gut of P.apterus was identified as cysteine and aspartyl proteases, and only a small part of the activity could be caused by some serine proteases.
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