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Pests, Plagues & Politics Lecture 13 Insect Communication: Light and Sound Shows
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Key Points: Insect Communication: Light and Sound Shows Bioluminescence – Which orders use it? – How do they use it? Sound Communication – Which order is best known for “singing” – Functions of acoustic behavior – Mechanisms for sound production – Temporal separation
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PnxkCX3tX1Q
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Communication with LIGHT Fireflies & Glow-worms Misnomer – neither Fire, nor are they Flies (well, sometimes they are) Coleoptera (Beetles) – families Lampyridae Phengodidae Utilize bioluminescence for sexual communication. http://beneficialbugs.org/bugs/Firefly/boreal_firefly.htm
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Communication with LIGHT Bioluminescence – Nearly 100% of a firefy’s light is given off as light – Compare this to an incandescent light bulb, which gives off 10% light and 90% heat The chemical reaction: – Understanding this chemistry led to the making of glowsticks!
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Fireflies Wonderful scientific names such as: – Photuris “tail light” (photos = light - ouron = tail) – Photinus “a little tail light” (diminutive form)
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Fireflies Courtship Signals – Flash patterns are species specific – Normally females (on the ground) signaling for flying males. – Females frequently wingless or even “larviform” as adults. Female Photinus bromleyi The Mating Game
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Fireflies Synchronous-Aggregate Synchronous-AggregateFlashers – S.E. Asia
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Glow-Worms Some are beetles - some are flies – ergo, the confusion of common names.
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Glow-Worm (a fly) Glow-Worm (a fly) Arachnocampa luminosa - A fungus gnat from New Zealand
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Glow-Worms Larvae create sticky mucous strings and light them up with their glowing tails to lure and trap other insects!
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Glow-worm (a beetle) Phengodes sp. larva, Maryland
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Frequently asked question Why are there no fireflies in Oregon?? ARE ANSWER: There ARE fireflies in Oregon! Zarhipis integripennisPterotus obscuripennis
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Oregon Glow-worms Two beetle species in two different families Two beetle species in two different families – Zarhipis integripennis (Phengodidae) a predator of millipedes light from each body segment – Pterotus obscuripennis (Lampyridae) a predator of snails light from terminal body segment – Bioluminescence from embryo-larva- larviform adult females (males do not “glow”)
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Communication with Sound “ A great many insect species produce sound by means of special structures, but only a few, such as crickets, grasshoppers & cicadas, are heard by most people” – Borror & DeLong The ORTHOPTERA – others: Coleoptera, Hymenoptera, Isoptera, Homoptera & Lepidoptera
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Functions of Acoustic Behavior REPRODUCTION – primarily for mate attraction &/or territorial display (much like birds) REPELLENCY – Passalid beetles; hissing cockroach, et alia DEFENSE ALARMS – termites, et alia
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Functions of Acoustic Behavior FOOD GATHERING – Phonotaxis by parasitoids & predators – Female flies of the genus Ormia must find a specific cricket host on which to deposit their parasitic maggots. To reproduce, female flies must perform the same task as female crickets - to find a singing male cricket. – has led to the “ development ” of smart, silent, satellite male crickets.
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Mechanisms for sound production STRIDULATION – the rubbing of one body part against another grasshoppers, beetles, ad infinitum THE most common insect musical “ instrument ” VIBRATION – of special membranes known as TYMBALS cicadas, some leafhoppers, some moths – of wings or thorax. incidental sounds from many, many species.
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Chirp Chirp! Only the males chirp – There are special songs for courtship, fighting and sounding an alarm Sense sound using tympani (hearing organs) in their front legs Want to know the temp.? – Chirps/15 sec. + 40.
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Mechanisms for sound production STRIKING against a substrate – alarm calls of damp wood termites EJECTION of air – death head moth, hissing cockroach
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The most noted “ singers ” The Orthopterans – grasshoppers - crickets - katydids – Stridulation is the primary mechanism – Two Song Types “ Calling ” songs by males for females “ Fighting ” songs by males for territorial defense
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Temporal Song Separation Night Singers – nearly all katydids Day Singers – most grasshoppers Day &/or Night Singers – most crickets
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Chorus Singers Cone-headed grasshoppers & tree crickets – More than two individuals singing simultaneously, with their sound pulses synchronized or alternating.
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Cone headed grasshopper Neoconocephalus retusus
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Tropical House Cricket Gryllodes sigillatis
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Southern Wood Cricket Gryllus fultoni
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Pine Tree Cricket Oecanthus pini
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Two spotted tree cricket Neoxabea bipunctata
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Hubbell ’ s Ground Cricket Pictonemobius hubbelli
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Tidewater meadow cricket Conocephalus nigropleuroides
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Slender Meadow Katydid Conocephalus fasciatus
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Long-spurred Meadow Katydid Orchelimum silvaticum
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Common Meadow Katydid Orchelimum vulgare
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Palmetto Conehead Belocephalus sabalis
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Key Points: Insect Communication: Light and Sound Shows Bioluminescence – Which orders use it? – How do they use it? Sound Communication – Which order is best known for “singing” – Functions of acoustic behavior – Mechanisms for sound production – Temporal separation
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Cicadas en masse, Princeton, 2004
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