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1.
Summary. In this paper we report on the chemical basis for trail recognition in Lasius nipponensis. On and near trails in the field, workers became aggressive against conspecific intruders and succeeded in protective contests, while intruders usually avoided confrontation. Such asymmetric interactions were also observed in the laboratory when two non-nestmate workers were sequentially placed in a clean glass dish, while mutual aggression was observed when they were placed simultaneously. Asymmetric aggression was also observed when the workers were placed in a dish previously conditioned by other workers, or when the dish was treated with the hexane rinse of the conditioned dish. The rinse contained a series of hydrocarbons, in which components and proportion were almost identical to those of the cuticular hydrocarbons of the workers, except for a lack of n-alkanes. Amounts of the hydrocarbons that remained on the dish were very small when all the tarsi of the workers were incapacitated. We therefore consider that the hydrocarbons are not adhesion of the cuticular hydrocarbons but secretion from the tarsi of workers, and serve as a key signal for trail recognition in this ant. 相似文献
2.
Hiroe Yasui Toshiharu Akino Midori Fukaya Sadao Wakamura Hiroshi Ono 《Chemoecology》2008,18(4):233-242
Summary. We conducted a series of experiments with the white-spotted longicorn beetle Anoplophora malasiaca (Thomson), and its host plant, Citrus unshiu, to examine the origin of the sesquiterpene hydrocarbons (SHCs; including β-elemene, β-caryophyllene, α-humulene, α-farnesene,
and several unidentified compounds) that are contained in the elytra of the beetles and act as an attractant. In the laboratory,
mechanically wounded citrus branches, as well as those fed upon by A. malasiaca, attracted males more frequently than intact branches. Solid phase microextraction (SPME) and subsequent analyses by gas
chromatography (GC) analyses detected measurable SHCs from the air around both mechanically wounded and beetle-infested branches,
as well as trace amounts from intact branches. The SHCs were also detected for a certain time from beetles that had fed on
the citrus branches, but the amounts decreased rapidly after they were removed from the host. This decrease generally corresponded
with a reduction of attractiveness of the beetles in a behavioural assay. Isolated females acquired the SHCs after exposure
to, but not upon contact with, other females that had fed on C. unshiu branches. We hypothesize that the citrus SHCs are adsorbed in, retained on, and released from the wax layer of the beetle
elytra. Since these compounds are released from branches when beetles feed, they may indirectly signal the presence of beetles
to others in the field. The high response rate to SHCs by males is likely representing mate searching behavior. The SHCs act
as kairomones with a releaser effect in the communication system of A. malasiaca.
Hiroe Yasui, Toshiharu Akino, Midori Fukaya: These authors contributed equally to this article. 相似文献
3.
Summary. Polyphagous caterpillars of the giant geometer
Biston robustum resemble the twigs of their respective food
sources in color and shape. Common predatory ants, including
Lasius and
Formica, were often observed to freely prowl directly on caterpillars bodies, even after antennal contact.
This suggests that the cuticular chemicals of the caterpillars
resemble those of the twigs of the foodplants, so we analyzed
both by GC and GC-MS. The chemical compositions
differed among caterpillars fed on a cherry, Prunus yedoensis,
a chinquapin Castanopsis cuspidata, and a camellia Camellia japonica. The cuticular chemicals of the caterpillars
resembled those of their corresponding food sources.
When the caterpillar diets were switched from the cherry to
camellia or chinquapin at the 4th instars, the caterpillars
cuticular chemicals changed after molting to resemble those
of their respective foods. Caterpillars also changed their
cuticular chemicals when they perched on cherry twigs and
fed on camellia or chinquapin leaves, but not when they
perched on camellia or chinquapin twigs and fed on cherry
leaves. The chemical similarities between the caterpillars
and the twigs were due to the digestion of host leaves, which
indicates that this is a diet-induced adaptation. 相似文献
4.
Toshiharu Akino 《Chemoecology》2002,12(2):83-89
Summary. The myrmecophilous beetles, Zyras comes (Staphylinidae) and Diaritiger fossulatus (Pselaphidae) are guests of the black shining ant Lasius fuliginosus. Host worker ants never attacked these beetles, and often gave regurgitant to Z. comes following tactile communication with the beetle. By contrast, the workers from colonies without the myrmecophiles showed
hostile responses towards Z. comes before tactile contact, but were not aware of D. fossulatus until contact. In L. fuliginosus, workers within a colony shared profiles, but the profiles differed among colonies. GC analyses showed that both Z. comes and D. fossulatus beetles had the same hydrocarbons as L. fuliginosus, and the profiles were more similar to those of the host colony workers than the foreign workers. Both Z. comes and D. fossulatus appear to imitate the hydrocarbon profile of their host workers, allowing integrating into the host nest. A Y-maze bioassay
indicated that Z. comes can follow the trail pheromone of L. fuliginosus. This suggests that Z. comes may detect other chemical signals of L. fuliginosus to keep closer interactions with the workers.
Received 22 June 2001; accepted 12 November 2001. 相似文献
5.
Summary. Trail-following behavior of Lasius japonicus was colony-specific in the field, while trail pheromone activity was not. We found that the footprint substance caused colony-specific trail-following behavior only when working in conjunction with the trail pheromone. The footprint substance alone did not lead the workers to follow trails. The substance consisted mainly of hydrocarbons with composition almost identical to that of cuticular hydrocarbons, except for the absence of n-alkanes. Nestmate workers shared footprint hydrocarbon profiles as well as cuticular hydrocarbons, but the profiles differed among colonies. We therefore consider that the footprint hydrocarbon profiles serve as the trail discrimination signal in L. japonicus. 相似文献
6.
Shuichi Ikebuchi Toshiharu Kojiri 《Journal of the American Water Resources Association》1992,28(1):223-231
ABSTRACT: The operational problems of a reservoir are expressed by three coordinates: space, time stage, and objective. The operational procedure is formulated using dynamic programming as a multi-objective problem. After comparing the scalar and the vector optimization, the scalar optimization technique is applied to turbidity analysis in a reservoir. 相似文献
7.
The mechanism by which palatable species take advantage of their similarity in appearance to those that are unpalatable, in order to avoid predation, is called Batesian mimicry. Several arthropods are thought to be Batesian mimics of social insects; however, social insects that are Batesian mimics among themselves are rare. In Malaysia we found a possible Batesian mimic in an arboreal ant species, Camponotus sp., which was exclusively observed on foraging trails of the myrmicine ant Crematogaster inflata. The bright yellow and black colouring pattern, as well as the walking behaviour, were very similar in both species. We observed general interactions between the two species, and tested their palatability and the significance of the remarkably similar visual colour patterns for predator avoidance. Prey offered to C. inflata was also eaten by Camponotus workers in spite of their being attacked by C. inflata, indicating that Camponotus sp. is a commensal of C. inflata. An experiment with chicks as potential predators suggests that Camponotus sp. is palatable whereas C. inflata is unpalatable. After tasting C. inflata, the chicks no longer attacked Camponotus sp., indicating that Camponotus sp. is a Batesian mimic of Crematogaster inflata. 相似文献
8.
Ishikawa Toshiharu Matsumoto Akio Szidarovszky Ferenc 《Environmental Economics and Policy Studies》2019,21(4):579-597
Environmental Economics and Policy Studies - This study demonstrates the conditions under which an increase in the ambient charge positively or negatively affects the total level of non-point... 相似文献
9.
Founding queens of the obligatory social parasite ant Polyergus samurai usurp the host ant Formica japonica colony. The aggressive behaviors of F. japonica workers on the parasite queen disappear after the parasite queen kills the resident queen. To determine whether the parasite queen chemically mimics the host ants, we examined the aggressive behavior of F. japonica workers toward glass dummies applied with various extracts of the parasite queen and host workers. The crude extracts and hydrocarbon fraction reproduced the host workers’ behavior to the live ants. The extracts of the post-adoption parasite queen, as well as the nestmate extracts of F. japonica, did not elicit the aggressive behavior, but the extract of the pre-adoption parasite queen triggered attacks by the host workers. The nestmate recognition of host workers did not change, regardless of contact with the parasite. The gas chromatography and gas chromatography–mass spectrometry analyses indicated that the cuticular hydrocarbon (CHC) profile of the parasite queen drastically changed during the process of usurpation. Discriminant analysis showed the successfully usurped P. samurai queen had colony-specific CHC profiles. CHC profiles of the P. samurai queen who killed the host queen were more similar to those of the host queen than the workers, while the P. samurai queen who usurped the queenless colony had a profile similar to those of host workers. These results suggest that the P. samurai queen usually acquires the CHCs from the host queen during the fight, but from host wokers in queenless host colonies. 相似文献
10.
Abdul Halim Lusi Ernawati Maya Ismayati Fahimah Martak Toshiharu Enomae 《Frontiers of Environmental Science & Engineering》2022,16(7):94