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1.
The arctic beetle, Pytho americanus Kirby, is frost tolerant in both larval and adult stages. This is the first demonstration that an insect can tolerate freezing in more than one life stage, a situation which would be congruous with its northern distribution and allow it to spread its life cycle over a number of growing seasons. The main biochemical correlates during the cold hardening process of low temperature acclimation are increasing glycerol and decreasing glycogen concentrations. Glycerol is the only polyol to be synthesized during acclimation, and it accumulates to a maximum of 8.2 and 12.2% of the fresh body weight in larvae and adults respectively. This coincides with the peak of frost tolerance. In addition to its normally assumed roles in cryoprotection it is suggested that glycerol may further serve to minimize dehydration in the overwintering insect by increasing the level of ‘bound’ water. Evidence is presented that indicates that glycerol is synthesized mainly from carbohydrate reserves, especially glycogen, but it does not rule out the possibility that a proportion of free glycerol comes from glyceride sources.P. americanus larvae and adults have low supercooling potential and maintain their supercooling points in the region of ?4° to ?8°C. It is hypothesized that these elevated supercooling points are a result of the presence in the haemolymph of nucleating agents which ensure ice formation at high sub-zero temperatures. It is believed that this beetle overwinters in a frozen state within its microhabitat, which is under bark of fallen spruce which is, in turn, covered by an insulating blanket of snow. The advantages of this overwintering strategy are discussed.  相似文献   

2.
W A Riddle  S Pugach 《Cryobiology》1976,13(2):248-253
Lower lethal temperatures represented by supercooling points were measured for the scorpion Paruroctonus aquilonalis (Stahnke) following exposure to laboratory regimes of photoperiod and temperature, as well as to ambient conditions. Analyses for the presence of glycerol and sorbitol in hemolymph, and of body water content were also performed.Laboratory results indicated that neither decreasing photoperiod nor decreasing temperature influenced supercooling point in a meaningful way. However, supercooling points did decrease significantly during the fall and winter among scorpions maintained outdoors, indicating development of cold hardiness. Neither glycerol nor sorbitol were detected, nor were the slight seasonal decreases found in water content considered sufficient to influence supercooling point.Ability to avoid winter freezing in P. aquilonalis appears primarily conferred by substantial seasonal depression of the supercooling point and is temporally associated with cessation of feeding in the fall. Supercooling responses were compared with those of another scorpion, Diplocentrus spitzeri, and differences tentatively were explained in terms of feeding activity.  相似文献   

3.
Insect antifreezes and ice-nucleating agents   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
John G. Duman 《Cryobiology》1982,19(6):613-627
Cold-tolerant, freeze-susceptible insects (those which die if frozen) survive subzero temperatures by proliferating antifreeze solutes which lower the freezing and supercooling points of their body fluids. These antifreezes are of two basic types. Lowmolecular-weight polyhydroxy alcohols and sugars depress the freezing point of water on a colligative basis, although at higher concentrations these solutes may deviate from linearity. Recent studies have shown that these solutes lower the supercooling point of aqueous solutions approximately two times more than they depress the freezing point. Consequently, if a freeze-susceptible insect accumulates sufficient glycerol to lower the freezing point by 5 °C, then the glycerol should depress the insect's supercooling point by 10 °C.Some cold-tolerant, freeze-susceptible insects produce proteins which produce a thermal hysteresis (a difference between the freezing and melting point) of several degrees in the body fluids. These thermal hysteresis proteins (THPs) are similar to the antifreeze proteins and glycoproteins of polar marine teleost fishes. The THPs lower the freezing, and presumably the supercooling, point by a noncolligative mechanism. Consequently, the insect can build up these antifreezes, and thereby gain protection from freezing, without the disruptive increases in osmotic pressure which accompany the accumulation of polyols or sugars. Therefore the THPs can be more easily accumulated and maintained during warm periods in anticipation of subzero temperatures. It is not surprising then that photoperiod, as well as temperature, is a critical environmental cue in the control of THP levels in insects.Some species of freeze-tolerant insects also produce THPs. This appears somewhat odd, since most freeze-tolerant insects produce ice nucleators which function to inhibit supercooling and it is therefore not clear why such an insect would produce antifreeze proteins. It is possible that the THPs have an alternate function in these species. However, it also appears that the THPs function as antifreezes during those periods of the year when these insects are not freeze tolerant (i.e., early autumn and spring) but when subzero temperatures could occur. In addition, at least one freeze-tolerant insect which produces THPs, Dendroides canadensis, typically loses freeze tolerance during midwinter thaws and then regains tolerance. The THPs could be important during those periods when Dendroides loses freeze tolerance by making the insect less susceptible to sudden temperature decreases.Comparatively little is known of the biochemistry of insect THPs. However, comparisons of those few insect THPs which have been purified with the THPs of fishes show some interesting differences. The insect THPs lack the large alanine component commonly found in the fish THPs. In addition, the insect THPs generally contain greater percentages of hydrophilic amino acids than do those of the fish. Perhaps the most interesting insect THPs are those from Tenebrio molitor which have an extremely large cysteine component (28% in one THP). Studies on the primary and higher-order structure of the insect THPs need to be carried out so that more critical comparisons with the fish THPs can be made. This may provide important insights into the mechanisms of freezing point and supercooling point depression exhibited by these molecules. In addition, comparative studies of the freezing and supercooling point depressing activities of the various THPs, in relation to their structures, should prove most interesting.It has become increasingly apparent over the last few years that most freeze-tolerant insects, unlike freeze-susceptible species, inhibit supercooling by accumulating ice-nucleating agents in their hemolymph. These nucleators function to ensure that ice formation occurs in the extracellular fluid at fairly high temperatures, thereby minimizing the possibility of formation of lethal intracellular ice. Little is known of the nature of the insect ice-nucleating agents. Those few which have been studied are heat sensitive and nondialyzable and are inactivated by proteolytic enzymes, thus indicating that they are proteinaceous. Studies on the structure-function relationships of these unique molecules should be done.  相似文献   

4.
The cold tolerance mechanism of the Antarctic terrestrial mite Alaskozetes antarcticus (Michael) was investigated in cultured animals. Freezing is fatal in this species and winter survival occurs by means of supercooling, which is enhanced by the presence of glycerol in the body. There is an inverse, linear relationship between the concentration of glycerol and the supercooling point, which may be as low as ?30°C. Feeding detracts from supercooling ability by providing ice nucleators in the gut which initiate freezing at relatively high sub-zero temperatures. Experiments on the effects of various environmental factors showed that low temperature acclimation gave rise to increased glycerol concentrations and suppressed feeding, while desiccation also stimulated glycerol production. Photoperiod had no effect on cold tolerance in this species. The juvenile instars of A. antarcticus were found to possess a greater degree of low temperature tolerance than adults.  相似文献   

5.
Two populations of the gall fly Eurosta solidaginsis utilize different strategies to endure seasonal exposure to temperatures below freezing. Both populations are freezing tolerant. In north temperate populations, supercooling points rise from ?10.2°C to ?6.2°C following exposures to temperatures below freezing. This level is maintained throughout winter and ensures frequent and prolonged periods of tissue freezing. South temperate populations depress the supercooling point to ?14.2°C during autumn and early winter, and this depression precludes extracellular ice formation during periods of supra-optimal temperature fluctuations. During mid-winter, supercooling points rise to the same level as in northern groups.Both populations accumulate three principal cryoprotective agents following first frost exposures (glycerol, sorbitol and trehalose). Cryoprotectants levels do not peak in northern populations until 4–6 weeks after first frost. In southern populations the accumulation profile is characterized by a high initial rate of synthesis, a protective overshoot and pronounced seasonal fluctuations. The relative survival advantages of each strategy are discussed.  相似文献   

6.
The survival of insects that inhabit Canadian arctic regions depends on a number of factors which have important ecological, behavioral, physiological, and biochemical components. The ability to withstand low winter temperatures is one of the most conspicuous adaptations of northern insects and the one most closely studied in the laboratory. Most species studied so far conform to one or other of the two major overwintering strategies, namely, frost susceptibility, the ability to avoid freezing by supercooling to a considerable degree, or frost tolerance, the survival of actual ice formation within the body. The Arctic beetle, Pytho americanus Kirby, is frost tolerant in both larval and adult stages, a situation which would be congruous with its northern distribution and allow it to spread its life cycle over a number of growing seasons. The main biochemical correlates during the cold-hardening process in this species are increasing glycerol and decreasing glycogen concentrations. In addition to its normally assumed roles in cryoprotection there is evidence to suggest that glycerol may further serve to minimize dehydration in the overwintering insect by increasing the level of bound water. P. americanus larvae and adults have narrow supercooling ranges and maintain their supercooling points in the region of ?4 to ?8 °C. It is hypothesized that these elevated supercooling points are a result of the presence in the hemolymph of nucleating agents which ensure ice formation at high subzero temperatures.Low temperature tolerance strategies of some other arctic and alpine species have been examined and compared with those of relatives from more southerly latitudes. P. americanus has been collected in the Canadian Rockies at elevations of over 6000′, and its frost-tolerant attributes are identical to those of the population collected in the Arctic. A closely related species, P. deplanatus, from the Rockies, however, although it too exhibits frost tolerance in the larval stage, differs markedly from P. americanus in its ability to depress its supercooling range to ?54 °C. It appears that P. deplanatus does not have the ability to synthesize ice-nucleating agents and, therefore, can overwinter in a supercooled condition. Two congeneric species of willow leaf gall sawflies (Pontania spp.), one from Tuktoyaktuk, N.W.T., and the other from southern Vancouver Island have also been compared and contrasted. Pontania sp. on Salix glauca (Tuk., ca. 70 °N) is frost tolerant in its larval stage, has relatively high supercooling points (ca. ?9.0 °C), but does not accumulate glycerol. Pontania sp. from Salix lasiandra (Victoria, ca. 48 °N) has almost identical overwintering properties, indicating the close phylogenetic affinities of cold tolerance in this genus rather than independent adaptation to widely different climatic conditions. Some of the lowest supercooling points ever recorded are from willow stem gall forming insects. Rhabdophaga sp. (Cecidomyiidae) forms potato galls on the stems of Salix lanata in the Inuvik area, N.W.T. After low temperature acclimation, supercooling points down to ?66 °C have been recorded from individual larvae. This is a record, and it indicates that we may be dealing with a system in which most water is in a metabolically bound state. Glycerol levels reach 20% of the fresh body weight during this period. Diastrophus kincaidii Cynipidae) forms stem galls on Thimble Berry (Rubus parviflorus) on southern Vancouver Island. Both of the forementioned species overwinter as larvae in their galls and are, therefore, exposed to ambient air temperatures. A more benign winter climate on Vancouver Island is reflected in the fact that D. kincaidii has supercooling points only in the ?30 to ?33 °C range at the peak of low temperature acclimation, and glycerol levels just below 4% of fresh body weight. Both species are frost susceptible and depend on their supercooling abilities to survive low winter temperatures.  相似文献   

7.
COLD TOLERANCE OF MICROARTHROPODS   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
1. Microarthropods (Acari and Collembola) are dominant components of the terrestrial fauna in the Antarctic. Their cold tolerance, which forms the mainspring of their adaptational strategy, is reviewed against a background of their structure and function, and by comparison with other arthropods. 2. Two species, the isotomid collembolan Cryptopygus antarcticus Willem and the oribatid mite Alaskozetes antarcticus (Michael), are examined in detail, and afford a comparative approach to the mechanisms underlying cold tolerance in insect and arachnid types. 3. All microarthropods appear to be freezing-susceptible (unable to tolerate tissue ice), and they utilize varying levels of supercooling to avoid freezing. Gut contents are considered to be the prime nucleation site in most arthropods when supercooled, particularly for Antarctic species. Moulting also increases individual supercooling ability especially in Collembola, and the activity of ice-nucleating bacteria in cold-hardy arthropods may be important. 4. Sources of ice nucleators are many and varied, originating externally (motes) or internally (ice-nucleating agents). They act either extracellularly (mainly in the haemolymph) to promote freezing in ice-tolerant life stages, or intracellularly in freezing-susceptible forms. Thermal hysteresis proteins, acting colligatively, occur in many arthropods including Collembola; they depress both the freezing point of body fluids and the whole-body supercooling point of freezing- susceptible and freezing-tolerant species. 5. Bimodal supercooling point distributions are a feature of microarthropods and water droplets. Samples of field populations of Antarctic mites and springtails show significant seasonal changes in these distributions, which in some respects are analogous to purely physical systems of water droplets. Supercooling points are confirmed as accurate measures of cold-hardiness and survival for Antarctic species, but not necessarily for other arthropods. The effects of constant sub-zero temperatures approaching the limit of the supercooling ability of arthropods require study. 6. Desiccation and dehydration influence microarthropod physiology in several ways; in Alaskozetes it triggers glycerol synthesis. Glycerol may aid binding of water in severely dehydrated insects, but the relationship of such ‘bound’ water to cold-hardiness is unclear. 7. Sugar alcohols (polyols) and sugars are accumulated as potential cryoprotectants in many arthropods at low temperatures, and antifreeze systems may be single or multi-component in structure. Cryoprotectant synthesis and regulation have been studied principally in insects, and fresh weight concentrations of 0–3-5 M of polyols have been found. Trehalose accumulation may also influence cold-hardiness. 8. Microarthropods fall within the spectrum of cold tolerance observed for arthropods and other invertebrates. No special adaptations are found in Antarctic species, and similar strategies and mechanisms are present in both insects and arachnids. The colonization and maintenance of microarthropod populations of polar land habitats seem not to have required the evolution of any novel features with respect to cold tolerance.  相似文献   

8.
Antifreeze proteins depress the freezing point of water while not affecting the melting point, producing a characteristic difference in freezing and melting points termed thermal hysteresis. Larvae of the beetle Dendroides canadensis accumulate potent antifreeze proteins (DAFPs) in their hemolymph and gut, but to achieve high levels of thermal hysteresis requires enhancers, such as glycerol. DAFPs have previously been shown to inhibit the activity of bacterial and hemolymph protein ice nucleators, however, the effect was not large and therefore the effectiveness of the DAFPs in promoting supercooling of the larvae in winter was doubtful. However, this study demonstrates that DAFPs, in combination with the thermal hysteresis enhancers glycerol (1 M) or citrate (0.5 M), eliminated the activity of hemolymph protein ice nucleators and Pseudomonas syringae ice-nucleating active bacteria, and lowered the supercooling points (nucleation temperatures) of aqueous solutions containing these ice nucleators to those of water or buffer alone. This shows that the DAFPs, along with glycerol, play a critical role in promoting hemolymph supercooling in overwintering D. canadensis. Also, DAFPs in combination with enhancers may be useful in applications which require inhibition of ice nucleators.  相似文献   

9.
The lower lethal temperature of many insects indicates an overwintering flexibility as a result of either extensive supercooling or production of cryoprotectants. Ontogenetically, the gall fly (Eurosta solidagensis) utilizes both means of seasonal cryoprotection. All stages except third instar larvae demonstrate supercooling points well below the lowest temperature normally experienced by that particular stage. The third instar larvae exhibit a high supercooling point but are well protected by a cryoprotectant system consisting of glycerol, sorbitol, and trehalose. Glycerol is accumulated, possibly from triglyceride sources, during early autumn and reaches plateau levels (0·6 M) by early winter. Sorbitol synthesis is delayed until freezing exposures and reaches a plateau with glycerol at 0·3 M. It is not until mid-winter that peak trehalose levels are reached (300 mg %). All cryoprotectant levels are a reflection of haemolymph concentrations.Laboratory acclimation experiments further quantify these results. Trehalose synthesis is time and temperature dependent and appears to be affected by developmental processes.  相似文献   

10.
L. Sømme 《Cryobiology》1981,18(2):212-220
Because of their dominant role in the fauna of alpine, Arctic and Antarctic locations Collembola and mites are of particular interest regarding adaptations to low temperatures. No freezing-tolerant species have been found in these groups of terrestrial arthropods, and it appears that all species depend entirely on supercooling to survive the lower temperatures of their habitats. While summer animals have high supercooling points, an increase in supercooling ability occurs during autumn and early winter, and can be explained as a two-step process. Initially gut content has to be eliminated to avoid heterogeneous nucleation at high subzero temperatures due to foreign nucleating agents. Second, supercooling is further enhanced through accumulation of glycerol or other lowmolecular cryoprotective substances. Further studies are needed on the ability of such animals to avoid inoculative freezing in their microhabitats.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The relationship between the concentration of insect hemolymph ice nucleators in samples of 0.9% NaCl solution and the supercooling points of the samples was determined by using a dilution technique. The supercooling points were only moderately reduced following dilution by a factor of up to 103, whereas dilution beyond this point caused a marked drop in the supercooling points. The dilution factor corresponding to a 50% reduction in the nucleating activity of native hemolymph is taken as a measure of the concentration of ice nucleators in native hemolymph.This method was used to determine the concentration of ice nucleators in the hemolymph of Eurosta solidaginis larvae from Minnesota and Texas, acclimated to different temperatures. Significant levels of nucleators were found only in larvae from Minnesota, and +5 °C was found to be the optimal temperature for nucleator formation. This comparatively high temperature optimum is interpreted as a physiological adaptation, ensuring sufficient nucleator levels in the hemolymph by the time of the first exposure to freezing temperatures in the winter.  相似文献   

13.
Cold tolerance of micro-arthropods from Alaskan taiga   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Abstract. Mean supercooling points for a variety of soil and litter arthropods including mites, springtails, a heteropteran and immature spiders from a central Alaskan taiga site ranged from -6.3 to -28.5°C during autumn. Variation in supercooling ability of five species of cryptostigmatid mites occurred throughout the year with increased cold tolerance in autumn and early winter concomitant with the temperature pattern of the habitat. No correlation between the level of supercooling and water content of the mites was evident. Changes in the frequency distribution of individual supercooling points occurred in autumn, winter, spring and summer samples which were species specific. All arthropods tested were susceptible to freezing, and the mites utilize supercooling to avoid freezing.  相似文献   

14.
Half-grown (third instar) larvae of the viceroy butterfly enter facultative winter diapause in response to short-day photoperiod after constructing tubular silk hibernacula in the basal portions of partly eaten willow leaves. Larval water content soon decreases from 80% to about 55%. No detectable quantities of glycerol occur in diapausing larvae maintained at room temperature. Subjection to cold and freezing temperatures causes high levels of glycerol to accumulate (up to 1.9 M or 7.8 g%) within the larvae. These metabolic changes probably lower the supercooling points of the larval fluids and retard both nucleative and inoculative freezing. Diapause termination is not photoperiod dependent, but involves an increase in water content and glycerol breakdown. An unidentified enzyme possibly removes the phosphate group from α-glycerophosphate, thus forming glycerol in the diapausing larvae.  相似文献   

15.
Larvae of the Siberian timberman beetle Acanthocinus aedilis display a number of unique features, which may have important implications for the field of cold hardiness in general. Their supercooling points are scattered over a wide temperature range, and some individuals have supercooling points in the low range of other longhorn beetles. However, they differ from other longhorn beetles in being tolerant to freezing, and in the frozen state they tolerate cooling to below −37°C. In this respect they also differ from the European timberman beetles, which have moderate supercooling capacity and die if they freeze. The combination of freezing tolerance and low supercooling points is unusual and shows that freezing at a high subzero temperature is not an absolute requirement for freezing tolerance. Like other longhorn beetles, but in contrast to other freeze-tolerant insects, the larvae of the Siberian timberman have a low cuticular water permeability and can thus stay supercooled for long periods without a great water loss. This suggests that a major function of the extracellular ice nucleators of some freeze-tolerant insects may be to prevent intolerable water loss in insects with high cuticular water permeability, rather than to create a protective extracellular freezing as has generally been assumed. The freezing tolerance of the Siberian timberman larvae is likely to be an adaptation to the extreme winter cold of Siberia.  相似文献   

16.
Insect supercooling phenomena observed during overwintering have been coupled with the seasonality of water and nucleator content and feeding behaviour. However, the strength of the conclusion has in most cases rested on presumption and model systems since nucleator content is not readily quantifiable. The ladybird, Coleomegilla maculata is an overwintering adult insect that fasts for weeks before hibernation, does not accumulate identifiable cryoprotectants during cold exposures, and is freezing intolerant. This species would be expected to overwinter with a constancy of ice nucleators subject to relative increases due to winter dehydration and decreases in supercooling ranges.However, acclimatization and laboratory acclimation experiments have demonstrated both temporal and temperature independence of water content while supercooling levels varied substantially. Supercooling ranges were narrow during warm exposures with a unimodal peak at −6·3°C (±0·2 S.E.). Progressive temperature reductions yielded phasic shifts to multimodal ranges until a low temperature peak of −18·4°C (±0·5 S.E.) was attained. Induced feedings of controlled nucleator substances resulted in predictable supercooling variations while ‘nucleator free’ diets yielded results consistent with natural populations.  相似文献   

17.
William Block 《Cryobiology》1981,18(4):436-444
Cold environments impose several ecological and physiological constraints upon arthropods, including reduction of metabolic rate, locomotory activity, and feeding. These result in slow growth rates and extended life cycles. Additionally, the probability of freezing is accentuated at subzero temperatures. Using data for Antarctic mites, the interplay of such constraints is examined, and the resultant ecophysiological adaptations outlined for a common oribatid mite (Alaskozetes antarcticus) of the maritime Antarctic. The synthesis suggests that its survival strategy is comprised of two components. First, the utilization of above-zero temperatures during the short austral summer to maximize growth and production, and thereby reproduce. These processes are aided by an elevation of its standard metabolic rate, commonly termed cold adaptation. Second, the tolerance of freezing temperatures by supercooling of all its postovum life stages throughout the entire year. Its supercooling potential is enhanced by the presence of glycerol and other polyols in the body fluids, the production of which is mediated by environmental temperature and desiccation at low relative humidities. Thus this species, in common perhaps with many other freezing susceptible arthropods, has ensured its survival in southern polar habitats by the evolution of a bipartite adaptational strategy.  相似文献   

18.
Summary The immature stages of two species of spiders which overwinter under the bark of standing dead trees survive subzero temperatures by depressing their supercooling points in winter. These are a crab spider,Philodromus sp. (Philodromidae), and a sac spider,Clubiona sp. (Clubionidae). The solutes which are at least partially responsible for the decrease in supercooling points in winter are: (1) proteins which produce a thermal hysteresis (a difference between the freezing and melting points) of approximately 2°C in the hemolymph and (2) glycerol. The thermal-hysteresis-factors and glycerol are only found in the spiders in winter. Acclimation of winter spiders to warm temperatures, at either long or short photoperiods, results in loss of the thermal hysteresis within two weeks. These thermal-hysteresis-factors appear to be similar to protein and glycoprotein antifreezes previously found in polar marine fishes and certain overwintering insects.  相似文献   

19.
Freezing avoidance in Andean giant rosette plants   总被引:3,自引:1,他引:2  
Abstract Frost avoidance mechanisms were studied in Espeletia spicata and Espeletia timotensis, two Andean giant rosette species. The daily courses of soil, air and tissue temperatures were measured at a site at circa 4000 m. Only the leaves were exposed to subzero temperatures; the apical bud and stem pith tissues were insulated by surrounding tissues. The leaf tissues avoided freezing by supercooling rather than by undergoing active osmotic changes. The temperatures at which ice formed in the tissues (the supercooling points) coincided with injury temperatures indicating that Espeletia tissue does not tolerate any kind of ice formation. For insulated tissue (apical bud, stem pith, roots) the supercooling point was around - 5°C coinciding with the injury temperature. Supercooling points of about –13 to - 16°C were observed for leaves. These results contrast with those reported for Afroalpine giant rosettes which tolerate extracellular freezing. The significance of different adaptive responses of giant rosettes to similar cold tropical environments is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
昆虫耐寒性研究   总被引:37,自引:4,他引:33  
景晓红  康乐 《生态学报》2002,22(12):2202-2207
昆虫是变温动物,气候变化是造成种群季节消长的基本原因之一。尤其在不良的低温环境中,昆虫耐寒力的高低是其种群存在与发展的种要前提,昆虫对低温的适应能力及其机理也因而成为昆虫生态学和生物进化研究中的一个深受重视的问题,本文论述了与耐寒性直接相关的过冷却点昆虫的抗寒对策,明确了昆虫耐寒性的一些基本概念,一方面从环境影响昆虫的角度对耐寒性的一般规律,如季节性变化,地理变异快速冷驯化的作用等做了简要的概念括,另一方面阐述了昆虫适应环境的生理生化机制,包括低分子量的抗冻物质的产生,冰核剂的作用及抗冻蛋白的功能等做了简要的概括,另一方面简单述了昆虫适应环境的生理生化机制,包括低分子量的抗冻物质的产生,冰核剂的作用及抗冻蛋白的功能等。强调昆虫与环境相互作用过程中的生态生理适应,并指出昆虫耐寒性应当与生活史中别的因素联系起来,这样才能对耐寒性有一个更加全面的理解。  相似文献   

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