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1.
This study describes the ultrastructure at 'the line of weakness' in the male puparium of Elenchus tenuicornis (Kirby) (Insecta: Strepsiptera). Superficially this line looked like an area of untanned cuticle but ultrastructurally it had an undifferentiated epicuticle, an untanned exocuticle and a loose textured endocuticle. It is speculated that the E. tenuicornis pharate adult male prior to emergence smears a chemical solution on the inner rim of the 'line of weakness' which dissolves the exo- and endocuticles. Following this, the slightest pressure exerted by the ptilinum of the male breaks open the cap of the puparium.  相似文献   

2.
This study describes the ultrastructure at ‘the line of weakness’ in the male puparium of Elenchus tenuicornis (Kirby) (Insecta: Strepsiptera). Superficially this line looked like an area of untanned cuticle but ultrastructurally it had an undifferentiated epicuticle, an untanned exocuticle and a loose textured endocuticle. It is speculated that the E. tenuicornis pharate adult male prior to emergence smears a chemical solution on the inner rim of the ‘line of weakness’ which dissolves the exo- and endocuticles. Following this, the slightest pressure exerted by the ptilinum of the male breaks open the cap of the puparium.  相似文献   

3.
Testes ultrastructure and spermatogenesis were studied in two species of Strepsiptera (Insecta), namely, Elenchus tenuicornis and E. japonicus, using light and electron microscopy. In both species, the testis is paired and consists of several large irregularly shaped follicles. Each follicle consists of a single clone of germ cells surrounded by a thin epithelium. During the larval and pupal stages, all the germ cells of each testis develop synchronously, and at eclosion, the gonads contain solely mature sperm. One of the most interesting findings is the morphogenesis of a large nuclear vesicle bounded by the fenestrate part of the nuclear envelope. This vesicle contains an electron-dense spherical structure, the chromatoid body. At the end of spermiogenesis, both the nuclear vesicle and its chromatoid body are eliminated with the excess cytoplasm. Large drops of residual cytoplasm containing several nuclear vesicles are present in the lumen of the testis and inside the cytoplasm of phagocytic cells.  相似文献   

4.
Previous uncertainty concerning the number of larval stages in a strepsipteran ( Elenchus tenuicornis ) was resolved by transmission and scanning electron microscope observations. The first larval instar (triungulinid) is free-living: after entering the host (a delphacid) it undergoes a normal ecdysis. The resulting second instar larva undergoes two further apolyses without ecdysis. In the male, the cuticle of the fourth instar larva tans to form the puparium, while the female becomes sexually mature without a further moult after extrusion of the cephalothorax through the host cuticle. The discarded exuviae of the triungulinid remain in the host abdomen; subsequent larval staging is made possible by the retention of the exuviae ensheathing the larva as each apolysis is accomplished.  相似文献   

5.
The twisted-wing parasite Elenchus japonicus is a major parasitoid of rice planthoppers (Hemiptera: Delphacidae), including the brown planthopper Nilaparvata lugens, the white-backed planthopper Sogatella furcifera, and the small brown planthopper Laodelphax striatellus. Another Elenchus species, E. yasumatsui, which is considered to be synonymous with E. japonicus, has also been described in southern Asia. However, limited biological and molecular data on this important parasitoid of rice planthoppers are available. In this study, E. japonicas-stylopized planthoppers were obtained from various regions in Asia and Japan. Sequences of the nuclear 18S ribosomal RNA gene and the mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase I gene of the strepsipterans were analyzed from 40 samples of E. japonicus: 14 from N. lugens, 6 from S. furcifera and 20 from L. striatellus. Sequence analysis of these samples revealed three genotypes of E. japonicus. Of the three types of E. japonicus, one was isolated only from L. striatellus from northern Japan. The other two types were found in all three rice planthopper species collected from a wide area in Asia. These results suggest that the three different genotypes of Elenchus can be associated with a particular geographical region and/or planthopper species. The relationship between two previously described Elenchus species and the present three genotypes needs to be elucidated.  相似文献   

6.
Wolbachia, a group of parasitic bacteria of arthropods, are believed to be horizontally transmitted among arthropod taxa. We present a new probable example of interspecies horizontal transmission of Wolbachia by way of an endoparasite based on the conformity of Wolbachia gene sequences. Field samples of two rice planthoppers, Laodelphax striatellus and Sogatella furcifera possessed identical Wolbachia. Among three major endoparasites of planthoppers, a strepsipteran, Elenchus japonicus, harboured the identical Wolbachia strain, suggesting strepsipteran transmission of Wolbachia from one planthopper to the other. No Wolbachia was detected in a mermithid nematode Agamermis unka, and dryinid wasps possessed different types of Wolbachia.  相似文献   

7.
The tsetse adult extricates itself from the puparium and surrounding substrate by a series of muscular contractions that generate a Stereotypic pattern of changes in hemolymph pressure. The digging action of the fly can be distinguished from a second pattern of hemocoelic pulsations that is used to remove obstacles from its path. When the fly is restrained extrication behavior will persist for over 10 h. If the adult's legs are freed while the remainder of the body remains encased in the puparium, the fly fails to engage in extrication behavior, a result which suggests that freedom of the legs switches off extrication behavior and permits the onset of expansion of the body to its final adult size and shape. Expansion behavior includes walking, grooming, pumping air into the gut, and contracting the abdominal muscles to generate rhythmic pulses of hemocoelic pressure. A barographic record of internal pressure changes reflects the dynamics of this morphogenetic process. Results from tsetse are compared with previous observations recorded in flesh flies.  相似文献   

8.
The phylogeny of Strepsiptera (Hexapoda)   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Previous phylogenetic analyses of Strepsiptera have been limited to characters from only males or first instar larvae, and by poor taxonomic sampling. This investigation is the first cladistic analysis to use more than fourfold as many characters as any prior study, and a broader sampling of taxa. The analysis of 189 morphological characters of all stages of representatives of all extant strepsipteran families and characters of adult males of amber fossils results in the following branching pattern: (?Protoxenos+ (?Cretostylops + (?Mengea + (Mengenillidae + (Corioxenidae + (Bohartillidae + (Halictophagidae + (Elenchidae + (?Protelencholax + (Myrmecolacidae + (Callipharixenidae + (Xenidae + Stylopidae)))))))))))). The basal placement of the Baltic amber fossil ?Protoxenos and the Burmese amber fossil ?Cretostylops is well founded. Even though ?Cretostylops is older than ?Protoxenos it is almost certainly not the most basal strepsipteran group but the sister group of a clade comprising the Baltic amber fossil ?Mengea + Strepsiptera s. str. (excl. stemlineage). Monophyly of Mengenillidae, Stylopidia, Stylopiformia s.l., Corioxenidae, Xenidae, and Stylopidae is confirmed. Mengenillidia is paraphyletic (with respect to ?Mengea (Mengeidae)), Elenchidae (with respect to ?Protelencholax) and the genus Stichotrema (with respect to the Baltic amber fossils). Thus Protelencholacidae fam. n. is described, and S. weitschati and S. triangulum are transferred to Palaeomyrmecolax. A ground plan of adult male Strepsiptera is provided and evolutionary interpretations are presented based on the obtained cladograms. © The Willi Hennig Society 2005.  相似文献   

9.
An evolutionary scenario for the enigmatic group Strepsiptera is provided, based on the results of a comprehensive cladistic analysis of characters of all life stages. A recently described fossil--+Protoxenos janzeni--the most archaic strepsipteran, sheds new light on the early evolution of the group and reduces the "morphological gap" between Strepsiptera and other insects. It weakens both current hypotheses--Coleoptera+Strepsiptera and Diptera+Strepsiptera (="Halteria"). The splitting into +Protoxenos (Protoxenidae) and the remaining Strepsiptera was linked with a distinct size reduction and many morphological changes. Unlike males of extant strepsipteran species, +Protoxenos was still able to process food. Mengeidae (+Mengea), with two small species, is the sister group of extant Strepsiptera. A unique characteristic of extant males (Strepsiptera s. str.) is the mouthfield sclerite. It is part of an air uptake apparatus which belongs to an extremely modified air-filled "balloon gut". Besides this, male strepsipterans possess specialised antennae and compound eyes, a strongly developed flight apparatus, large testes, and a sperm pump, whereas other organ systems are strongly reduced (e.g., fat body, malpighian tubules). Males are designed to find females within a few hours and to copulate. A dramatic change is linked with the split into Mengenillidae and Stylopidia. The change to pterygote hosts and the permanent endoparasitism of the females are evolutionary novelties acquired by the latter clade, and linked with far-reaching morphological transformations, e.g. the presence of unique brood organs. Hairy tarsal adhesive devices are present in males and guarantee efficient attachment to the host during copulation. A well-founded clade within Stylopidia is Stylopiformia, which are characterised by a unique fissure-shaped birth opening. The evolutionary development towards the most specialised and successful forms (parasites of aculeate Hymenoptera [e.g., Xenidae+Stylopidae], ca. 46% of the species) is a stepwise process. The presented evolutionary scenario comprises a complex network of functionally correlated morphological changes in primary larvae, secondary larvae, females and males.  相似文献   

10.
The thorax of Mengenilla was examined using traditional morphological techniques and its features were documented in detail using scanning electron microscopy and computer-based 3D reconstructions. The results were compared to conditions found in other holometabolan insects. The implications for the systematic placement of Strepsiptera are discussed. The observations are interpreted in the light of the recently confirmed sistergroup relationship between Strepsiptera and Coleoptera (Coleopterida). The synapomorphies of the thorax of Strepsiptera and Coleoptera are partly related with posteromotorism (e.g., increased size of the metathorax), partly with a decreased intrathoracic flexibility (e.g., a fused pronotum and propleurum), and partly independent from these two character complexes (e.g., not connected profurca and propleuron). Strepsiptera are more derived than Coleoptera in some thoracic features (e.g., extremely enlarged metathorax) but have also preserved some plesiomorphic conditions (e.g., tegulae in both pterothoracic segments). All potential apomorphies of Mecopterida are missing in Strepsiptera. The last common ancestor of Coleopterida had already acquired posteromotorism but the wings were still largely unmodified. Several reductions in the mesothorax likely occurred independently.  相似文献   

11.
B-chromosomes were observed in a Polish natural population of Tetrix tenuicornis. Three males showed a mitotically unstable and probably acrocentric B-chromosome, similar in size to the sex chromosome. In one specimen two forms of the B-chromosome occurred in various combinations (i.e. 6A+X; 6A+B; A; 6A+X+B; 6A+X+2B).  相似文献   

12.
A well-preserved specimen of amber Strepsiptera was erroneously described as Stylops neotropicallis Kogan and Poinar, 2010. The taxonomic position of the species was based on a count of six antennomeres (typical of the Stylopidae); however, further observations showed that there are actually seven antennomeres, which places the fossil in the family Myrmecolacidae, and it is herein redescribed in the genus Palaeomyrmecolax Kulicka, 2001. Furthermore, nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy analysis of a sample of the amber piece containing the fossil revealed that it was Baltic rather than Dominican amber as originally thought. The fossil was compared with another specimen from Baltic amber in the Poinar collection, which shows close affinity to Palaeomyrmecolax succineus Kulicka, 2001, the type species of the genus. Palaeomyrmecolax neotropicallis (n.comb.) differs from that specimen and seems to differ also from the other four species in the genus Palaeomyrmecolax.  相似文献   

13.
Many animals change their diet during the season according to food availability. The current field study determined whether the groundhopper Tetrix tenuicornis (Orthoptera: Tetrigidae), which specializes on moss and detritus, changes its diet during the season under conditions in which food components are constantly available. Dietary differences of T. tenuicornis were studied through the season, from May to October, by alimentary tract analyses. Detritus and moss (phylloids) dominated the alimentary tract contents, and other components were found in only minor amounts. The diversity of moss species in the alimentary tract varied during the season, and more moss species were consumed in spring and summer than in autumn. Diet was affected by developmental stage, sex (females consumed more food than males), population and abiotic factors. The rate at which detritus was consumed was significantly affected by the ambient temperature but the rate at which moss was consumed was mainly affected by relative humidity. Later instars consumed greater amounts of detritus than younger instars, and this difference corresponded to body size.  相似文献   

14.
Carapelli A  Vannini L  Nardi F  Boore JL  Beani L  Dallai R  Frati F 《Gene》2006,376(2):248-259
In this study, the nearly complete sequence (14,519 bp) of the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) of the entomophagous endoparasite Xenos vesparum (Insecta: Strepsiptera) is described. All protein coding genes (PCGs) are in the arrangement known to be ancestral for insects, but three tRNA genes (trnA, trnS(gcu), and trnL(uag)) have transposed to derived positions and there are three tandem copies of trnH, each of which is potentially functional. All of these rearrangements except for that of trnL(uag) is within the short span between nad3 and nad4 and there are numerous blocks of unassignable sequence in this region, perhaps as remnants of larger scale predisposing rearrangements. X. vesparum mtDNA nucleotide composition is strongly biased toward A and T, as is typical for insect mtDNAs. There is also a significant strand skew in the distribution of these nucleotides, with the J-strand being richer in A than T and in C than G, and the N-strand showing an opposite skew for complementary pairs of nucleotides. The hypothetical secondary structure of the LSU rRNA has also been reconstructed, obtaining a structural model similar to that of other insects.  相似文献   

15.
Large numbers of males of the bee Centris pallida Fox have been observed patrolling areas in which females are emerging. Males locate specific sites at which a buried bee is about to emerge and dig down to meet the other individual, male or female. If it is a female, mating is initiated when she scrambles into the excavation pit created by the male. Males fight intensely with one another for possession of digging sites and for unburied virgin females. Experiments indicate that males locate conspecifics beneath the surface on the basis of extremely non-specific olfactory cues; they are capable of locating buried honey bees and other insects. The evolution of digging behaviour is traced to selection favouring males that are first to reach a virgin female which will mate just once in her lifetime. A number of examples are given of other insects that have evolved similar abilities, apparently in response to similar selection pressures.  相似文献   

16.
The larva of Libellula foliata (Kirby) is described based upon mature larvae from the Biosphere Reserve of ??El Triunfo?? in the state of Chiapas. It belongs to the small group of species without dorsal protuberances, L. composita (Hagen), L. comanche Calvert and L. saturata Uhler. The following combination of characters permits the separation of L. foliata larva from the other aforementioned larvae: tergites 6?C10 uniformly colored, no lateral spines on segments 8?C9, 5?C6 palpal setae and 3 long premental setae. After this finding, only the larvae of Libellula gaigei Gloyd and L. nodisticta Hagen remain undiscovered for the Mexican species of Libellula.  相似文献   

17.
18.
The sperm pumps of Strepsiptera and Antliophora (Hexapoda)   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Male genital structures of representatives of Strepsiptera, Siphonaptera and Diptera are described in detail, with special emphasis on sperm pumps. The parts involved in the apparatus are evaluated with respect to their homology. Functional interpretations are presented based on the morphological observations. The phylogenetic significance of characters related to the male genital apparatus is discussed. The sperm pumps differ strongly in Strepsiptera and Antliophora (s.s.) and are not homologous. The strepsipteran type, which lacks any sclerotized parts, has evolved independently. Autapomophies of the male genital apparatus are the compact testes, the large balloon‐shaped vesicula seminalis, the strongly developed musculature of the proximal ductus ejaculatorius, the strongly simplified copulatory organ, the unusual muscles of segments VIII and IX, and the complete absence of accessory glands. The median fusion and almost globular shape of the vesicula are potential autapomorphies of Corioxenidae. The absence of the furrow separating the testes from the vesicula seminalis is a derived condition found in Xenos and Myrmecolax. A sperm pump is absent in Boreus (Mecoptera) and Culicomorpha and the functionally relevant parts and their arrangement differ strongly in Siphonaptera, Pistillifera and Diptera (excl. Culicomorpha). The presence of a functional and homologous pumping apparatus does not belong to the groundplan of Antliophora, which implies that this alleged autapomorphy of the clade is invalid. A sperm pump belongs to the groundplan of Diptera and was secondarily reduced in Culicomorpha, many representatives of Bibionomorpha, and in Diopsidae. It was very likely primarily absent in Mecoptera. However, the precise reconstruction of the groundplan depends on the position of Nannochoristidae within Mecoptera and on the possible affinities of Siphonaptera and Boreidae. Sperm pumps should be considered as a functional term and not be used as a character for phylogenetic reconstruction, unless specific similarities are included in the character definition.  相似文献   

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