The Role of Tactile and Chemical Stimuli in the Formation and Maintenance of the Processions of the Social Caterpillar Hylesia lineata (Lepidoptera: Saturniidae) |
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Authors: | T D Fitzgerald A Pescador-Rubio |
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Institution: | (1) Department of Biological Sciences, State University of New York at Cortland, Cortland, New York, 13045;(2) Centro Universitario de Investigación y Desarrollo Agropecuario, Universidad de Colima, Colima, México |
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Abstract: | Colonies of the social caterpillar Hylesia lineata (Lepidoptera: Satumiidae) form long, single-file, head-to-tail processions as they move between their shelters and distant feeding sites. Although investigations of other processionary species have implicated a silk trail in the processionary process, silk plays little or no role in initiating or maintaining processions in H. lineata. Studies we report here implicate both tactile stimuli and a trail pheromone in the establishment and maintenance of processions. Processionaries elicit locomotion in the individual preceding them in line by brushing their heads against prominent sulci that project from the tips of their abdomens. Caterpillars mark their pathways with a pheromone deposited by brushing the ventral surfaces of their last abdominal segments against the substrate. The persistent pheromone is soluble in hexanes and appears to be secreted from glandular setae found on the proximal regions of the anal prolegs and the venter. In Y-choice tests, caterpillars selected newer trails over older trails and stronger trails over weaker trails. They did not distinguish between trials deposited by newly fed caterpillars and those deposited by starved caterpillars. Despite the unidirectional nature of processions, there is no indication that caterpillars can determine from the trail alone the direction in which the procession advanced. The significance of these findings to the foraging ecology of the caterpillars is discussed. |
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Keywords: | Hylesia lineata social caterpillar trail pheromone processionary caterpillar foraging Hemileuca maia Saturniidae |
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