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1.
Abstract.
  • 1 Life history data were gathered for south Florida Oncopeltus fasciatus reared from eggs on Nerium oleander seeds and milkweed seeds in the laboratory.
  • 2 Milkweed seeds were found to be a superior food source since O.fasciatus grew faster, laid more clutches, and has a higher total fecundity on milkweed seeds.
  • 3 Fruiting N.oleander was found to be a better food source than nonfruiting milkweeds in a summer field study in south Florida since no nymphs survived to the adult stage on nonfruiting milkweeds but some did on N.oleander.
  • 4 O.fasciatus adults and nymphs are abundant on N.oleander in the summer in south Florida when N.oleander is fruiting; no O.fasciatus nymphs are found in the summer on the milkweeds which are not fruiting.
  • 5 O.fasciatus leave N.oleander in the autumn when milkweeds start to fruit and can then be found on fruiting milkweeds.
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2.
Summary The life ofOncopeltus fasciatus centers on the seeds of milkweeds (Asclepiadaceae,Asclepias syriaca in this study). Adults reproduce prolifically on these seeds, but they engage in only half as much copulation and lay only a few eggs when fed milkweed buds and flowers instead. They can not maintain body weight on a diet of just vegetative plants. Vegetative shoots support only slow growth and produce adults only in certain circumstances.Seeds are often inaccessible to nymphs in the three youngest instars, since their mouthparts are too short to penetrate the thick walls ofA. syriaca pods. Nymphs feeding from the outside of closed pods develop more slowly than those feeding on exposed seeds. Since mortality occurs at a constant rate, slow growth results in fewer surviving. Even adults, which can feed through almost any pod wall, prefer to feed where it is thinnest. Thus the pod wall effectively protects many seeds from this herbivore.Nymphs in larger groups (20 individuals) suffer much lower mortality than those in small groups (5 individuals), when they are feeding from the outside of closed pods. However, group size does not affect survival when nymphs are fed seed. Gregariousness apparently partly compensates for the less nutritious diet attainable from the outside of pods and thus is related to this bug's extreme specialization of diet.Other characteristics coordinated with the seed requirement include the timing of migration and egg laying, the female's choice of oviposition site, and the nymphs' balanced tendencies to be sedentary and to disperse. Among the milkweeds, such traits as thick pod walls, wide spacing, and rapid seed dispersal could have been selected for by a seed predator such asO. fasciatus.As a specialist and a probable agent of such selection,O. fasciatus is committed to keeping up with changes in its host plant. This requires maintaining some flexibility in its behavior or gene pool. K. Evans (personal communication) finds thatO. fasciatus in California onA. fascicularis lays eggs so early that the first nymphs hatch as the first flowers are opening. In that more equitable climate and on that host, adult reproduction is apparently not as dependent on pods being present in the colonized patch, and the nymphs must rely on non-seed food more often than they do in the association withA. syriaca in the East and Midwest. This very specialized species apparently retains enough adaptability to exploit milkweeds of various forms and phenologies living in a wide range of climates. This adaptability could promise its continued success in the coevolutionary race with its host plants.  相似文献   

3.
Antipredator defense of herbivorous insects often relies on the potential toxicity of defensive chemicals sequestered from their host plants. The colorful Lygaeinae (Heteroptera: Lygaeidae) store a concentrated mixture of toxic cardenolides (cardiac glycosides) in specialized storage compartments of the bugs' integument, from which they are released upon attack. Larvae and adults of the large milkweed bug Oncopeltus fasciatus (Heteroptera: Lygaeinae) are specialized to feed on cardenolide‐containing milkweeds in the plant genus Asclepias and display a conspicuous red and black colorations. To investigate whether O. fasciatus gained improved protection by feeding on a toxic host plant (Asclepias syriaca), compared to a nontoxic alternative (sunflower seeds), we fed nymphs and adults of O. fasciatus to the golden orb‐weaver Nephila senegalensis. While visually oriented vertebrates, such as avian predators, have been intensively investigated for their reaction to defensive compounds and aposematic coloration, less attention has been paid to invertebrate predators. Their different perceptual abilities can provide important opportunities for testing hypotheses on warning coloration and chemical defenses. The predation trials showed that the bugs fed on Asclepias were significantly less likely to be killed than the bugs reared on a cardenolide‐free diet. This suggests that sequestered cardenolides in O. fasciatus nymphs and adults represent a significant fitness advantage on an individual level against this invertebrate predator. Yet, when testing for avoidance learning in the spiders, negative experience did not change the way how similar prey was attacked at the next encounter. In this case, visual or chemical aposematism thus does not seem to matter for predator learning.  相似文献   

4.
We examined behavioral mechanisms underlying aggregation and mate location in the red milkweed beetle, Tetraopes tetrophthalmus (Forster) (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae). Larvae of this species feed on rhizomes of common milkweed, Asclepias syriaca L., and adults feed on the flowers and foliage, aggregating on individual stems within milkweed patches. Adults preferred to aggregate on milkweeds that had multiple, large inflorescences. Males actively searched for females, often flying between host plants. Mate location did not appear to involve long-range pheromones or vision, but rather males landed on milkweed stems arbitrarily, whether or not females were present. Males remained for longer periods, and so tended to accumulate, on milkweed stems that had female-biased sex ratios. We conclude that aggregation of T. tetrophthalmus is cued by host plant characteristics but dynamically influenced by the sex ratio of conspecifics present on individual stems.  相似文献   

5.
The decline in migratory monarch butterflies (Danaus plexippus) over the past 20 years has been attributed to several drivers, including loss of their host plants (milkweeds Asclepias spp.). This has sparked widespread interest in milkweed ecology and restoration. We developed a model on environmental and habitat‐type variables to predict milkweed abundance by sampling 93 prairie plantings (47 conservation plantings and 46 roadsides) and 5 unplowed prairie remnants throughout the state of Iowa, United States. Milkweeds were censused in 10–25 random locations within each site, and data on plant diversity, age of planting, soil characteristics, and management were tested as predictors of abundance. Milkweed densities of all species combined were highest in remnant prairies (8,705 stems/ha), intermediate in roadside plantings (1,274 stems/ha), and lowest in conservation plantings (212 stems/ha). Most milkweeds were common milkweeds Asclepias syriaca, which were more abundant in roadside than conservation plantings. Remnants contained the most milkweed species. Total milkweed and common milkweed abundance were both predicted by higher soil pH, a more linear site shape, and lower soil bulk density across restorations. Our results indicate that common milkweed is maintained by disturbance, and establishes readily in rural roadside habitat. Remnants are important as reservoirs for multiple milkweed species and should be protected.  相似文献   

6.
Many herbivorous insects sequester defensive compounds from their host‐plants and incorporate them into their eggs to protect them against predation. Here, we investigate whether transmission of cardenolides from the host‐diet to the eggs is maternal, paternal, or biparental in the large milkweed bug, Oncopeltus fasciatus (Dallas) (Hemiptera: Lygaeidae). We reared individual bugs on either milkweed seeds [MW; Asclepias syriaca L. (Apocynaceae)] that contain cardenolides, or on sunflower seeds [SF; Helianthus annuus L. (Asteraceae)] that do not contain cardenolides. We mated females and males so that all four maternal/paternal diet combinations were represented: MW/MW, MW/SF, SF/MW, and SF/SF. Using larvae of the common green lacewing, Chrysoperla (Chrysopa) carnea (Stevens) (Neuroptera: Chrysopidae), we conducted two‐choice predation trials to assess whether maternal, paternal, or biparental transmission of cardenolides into the eggs of O. fasciatus increased protection against predation. Furthermore, we used high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) to assess putative cardenolide content of eggs from the various parental diet treatment groups. The predation trials suggested that regardless of male diet, eggs were afforded better protection when females had been raised on milkweed. However, many eggs were at least partially consumed. This suggests that although chemical defence of eggs does not guarantee protection to eggs on an individual basis, they may increase the probability that some eggs in a clutch are left intact thereby potentially conferring a fitness advantage to more offspring than if eggs are left unprotected. Based on HPLC analysis we found that maternal contribution of cardenolides was significantly greater than paternal contribution of cardenolides to the eggs, supporting the results of our predation trials that a maternal diet of milkweed makes eggs more distasteful than a paternal diet of milkweed.  相似文献   

7.
Summary By eliminating the food plant, Asclepias curassavica, monarch butterflies, Danaus plexippus, have virtually eliminated milkweed bugs, Oncopeltus spp., from the island of Barbados. The relatively open terrain of Barbados means the plants have no refuge; the butterflies survive on an alternate milkweed food plant, Calotropis procera, whose thick-walled pods make seeds unavailable to the bugs.  相似文献   

8.
The Eastern North American monarch butterfly population has severely declined over the past decade. The decreasing availability of larval host plants (milkweeds) due to the use of herbicide-tolerant crops has been implicated in this decline. Roadsides could provide additional habitat for monarchs. In this study we document the occurrence of milkweed and monarchs on roadsides, and discuss whether roadsides are appropriate targets for monarch habitat restoration. We sampled roadside rights-of-way in the Upper Midwestern U.S. during the summer of 2015 to estimate the abundance, distribution, and diversity of milkweeds and the extent to which monarchs use these milkweeds. We then compared monarch densities in roadsides to other habitat types and modelled immature monarch densities based on several site characteristics. Our findings suggest that roadsides have conservation potential for monarchs, especially when other habitat is scarce and if wildlife-friendly management practices are enacted. Milkweeds were found on ~60% of roadside transects. Asclepias syriaca was the most common of the seven species encountered, occurring on 97% of transects with milkweed. Immature monarchs were observed in roadsides, but in lower densities than other habitats during the same time period. At lower milkweed densities, immature monarch density per unit area is positively correlated with milkweed density. However, milkweed density weakens as a predictor of immature monarch density over ~0.6 plants per m2, possibly indicating a saturation effect.  相似文献   

9.
Planting milkweeds on public and private lands has emerged as a central conservation strategy for restoring declining North American migratory populations of the monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus). Nearly all actionable science on this issue has focused on restoring common milkweed (Asclepias syriaca L.) in rural land types. The aim of this study was to develop recommendations for the best milkweeds for managed gardens intended to support both monarch butterflies and bees. Eight milkweed (Asclepias) species varying in height, form, and leaf shape were grown in a common-garden experiment at a public arboretum. We measured milkweed growth, tillering, and bloom periods, conducted bi-weekly counts of eggs and larvae to assess colonization by wild monarchs, and evaluated suitability for growth of monarch larvae. We also quantified bee visitation and compared the bee assemblages associated with six of the eight species, augmented with additional collections from other sites. Monarchs rapidly colonized the gardens, but did not equally use all of the milkweed species. More eggs and larvae were found on taller, broad-leaved milkweeds, but there was relatively little difference in larval performance, suggesting ovipositional preference for more apparent plants. Asclepias tuberosa and A. fascicularis attracted the greatest number of bees, whereas bee genus diversity was greatest on A. verticillata, A. fascicularis, and A. tuberosa. Milkweeds that do not spread extensively by tillering may be best suited for managed gardens. Combining milkweeds that are preferred by ovipositing monarchs with ones that are particularly attractive to bees may enhance conservation value of small urban gardens.  相似文献   

10.
Summary The large milkweed bug, Oncopeltus fasciatus, is a specialized seed feeder that has been observed completing nymphal development in the field on only a small proportion of its potential host species within the genus Asclepias. In central Missouri only two of the six milkweed species studied, A. syriaca and A. verticillata, commonly supported nymphal O. fasciatus growth in the field. The seed of all six species, however, was equally suitable food for bugs reared in the laboratory. In laboratory preference tests, adult bugs chose to feed on the largest seeds, A. hirtella, but such a preference could not explain the observed field feeding patterns.One explanation to account for the observed host plant selection is based upon an energetic analysis. Only A. syriaca provided enough seed biomass for a clutch of O. fasciatus nymphs to develop on a single plant, and only A. verticillata grew in high enough density that a clutch could find sufficient food within the limited range of nymphal movement. These results illustrate a corollary of the resource concentration hypothesis: within a plant group whose members share similar secondary plant chemistries, the only species that will be viable hosts for a specialized herbivore are those that provide the minimal resource density necessary for the completion of nymphal development.In central Missouri, O. fasciatus has specialized on a critical resource density, not traits of individual Asclepias species. The appearance of host selection within the potential host plant spectrum is the result of a characteristic growth form, seed output, and dispersion pattern for each milkweed species that makes some species much more likely than others to produce sufficient seed resources.  相似文献   

11.
The central part of the mitochondrial coxII gene was amplified from 38 different dicots and two monocots using polymerase chain reaction. In 30 of the 40 plants studied, the amplified coxll gene-fragment contains an intron, ranging from 930 bp in Capsicum (pepper) in Solanaceae to 1,635 bp in Ampelamus albidans (climbing milkweed) in Asclepiadaceae. The composition of this intron varies as revealed by Southern hybridizations using oligonucleotide probes specific to the coxII intron-regions in maize, wheat, and rice. In the Apocynaceae, Calharanthus roseus (Madagascar periwinkle) and Vinca minor (common periwinkle) lack the coxII intron, while other members of the same family (various Mandevilla species, Nerium oleander and Apocynum cannabinum) and members of the closely related Asclepiadaceae (Asclepias incarnata, Ampelamus albidans and Asclepias tuberosa) retain the intron. Analysis of these data suggest a selective loss of the coxII intron from a plant, ancestral to both Catharanthus and Vinca, after the divergence of the Asclepiadaceae and Apocynaceae. The remaining eight plants from the Brassicaceae, Cucurbitaceae, Fabaceae, and Onagraceae lacking the intron fall into a single group or clade using the phylogenetic tree proposed by Chase et al. (Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden: 80: 528–580, 1993) based on sequence of the chloroplast rbcL gene.  相似文献   

12.
Zusammenfassung Die Frage der Wirtsspezifität von Oncopeltus fasciatus Dall. wurde unter Verwendung der Samen von Asclepias syriaca, Helianthus annuus und Arachis hypogaea untersucht. Die eindeutige Bevorzugung von A. syriaca gegenüber den Samen von Helianthus und Arachis beruht auf einer oder mehreren Substanzen in der Samenschale von Asclepias, die den Anstich auslösen. Diese Substanz(en) läßt (lassen) sich extrahieren und auf Helianthus-Samen übertragen. Milchröhreninhalt von A. syriaca-Pflanzen zeigt denselben Effekt. Die Lygaeide Oncopeltus fasciatus kann jedoch mit H. annuus-Samen ernährt und erfolgreich gezüchtet werden. Entwicklungsgeschwindigkeit und Reproduktion sind zwar vermindert, Lebensdauer und Eigewichte aber auf beiden Wirten identisch. Zuchtversuche mit Samen von Arachis hypogaea dagegen verliefen erfolglos.
Summary The host specificity of the lygaeid Oncopeltus fasciatus feeding on seeds of Asclepias syriaca, Helianthus annuus and Arachis hypogaea has been investigated. The bug clearly prefers seeds of A. syriaca over seeds of A. hypogaea and H. annuus though the latter are also accepted. Stylet penetration is stimulated by unidentified chemical factors occurring in the milkweed seed coat. It is assumed that this stimulation increases the frequency of feeding acts and thus the volume of uptaken food. An extract of the seed shell of A. syriaca was coated on the surface of Helianthus seeds. After this treatment the bug was stimulated to penetrate the latter. The same effect was obtained with the milky latex of Asclepias plants. O. fasciatus can be reared on seeds of H. annuus successfully. The speed of development and the reproduction capacity are diminished but the longevity and the weight of the eggs on both hosts (A. syriaca and H. annuus) are identical. Seeds of A. hypogaea, on the contrary, appeared to be totally unsuitable as a rearing substrate.
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13.
The insects that feed on the related plant families Apocynaceae and Asclepiadaceae (here collectively termed "milkweeds") comprise a "component community" of highly specialized, distinctive lineages of species that frequently sequester toxic cardiac glycosides from their host plants for defense against predators and are thus often aposematic, advertising their consequent unpalatability. Such sets of specialized lineages provide opportunities for comparative studies of the rate of adaptation, diversification, and habitat-related effects on molecular evolution. The cerambycid genus Tetraopes is the most diverse of the new world milkweed herbivores and the species are generally host specific, being restricted to single, different species of Asclepias, more often so than most other milkweed insects. Previous work revealed correspondence between the phylogeny of these beetles and that of their hosts. The present study provides analyses of near-complete DNA sequences for Tetraopes and relatives that are used to establish a molecular clock and temporal framework for Tetraopes evolution with their milkweed hosts.  相似文献   

14.
Specialization is common in most lineages of insect herbivores, one of the most diverse groups of organisms on earth. To address how and why specialization is maintained over evolutionary time, we hypothesized that plant defense and other ecological attributes of potential host plants would predict the performance of a specialist root-feeding herbivore (the red milkweed beetle, Tetraopes tetraophthalmus). Using a comparative phylogenetic and functional trait approach, we assessed the determinants of insect host range across 18 species of Asclepias. Larval survivorship decreased with increasing phylogenetic distance from the true host, Asclepias syriaca, suggesting that adaptation to plant traits drives specialization. Among several root traits measured, only cardenolides (toxic defense chemicals) correlated with larval survival, and cardenolides also explained the phylogenetic distance effect in phylogenetically controlled multiple regression analyses. Additionally, milkweed species having a known association with other Tetraopes beetles were better hosts than species lacking Tetraopes herbivores, and milkweeds with specific leaf area values (a trait related to leaf function and habitat affiliation) similar to those of A. syriaca were better hosts than species having divergent values. We thus conclude that phylogenetic distance is an integrated measure of phenotypic and ecological attributes of Asclepias species, especially defensive cardenolides, which can be used to explain specialization and constraints on host shifts over evolutionary time.  相似文献   

15.
Wing membranes of laboratory and field-reared monarch butterflies (Danaus plexippus) were analyzed for their stable-hydrogen (δD) and carbon (δ13C) isotope ratios to determine whether this technique could be used to identify their natal origins. We hypothesized that the hydrogen isotopic composition of monarch butterfly wing keratin would reflect the hydrogen isotope patterns of rainfall in areas of natal origin where wings were formed. Monarchs were reared in the laboratory on milkweed plants (Asclepias sp.) grown with water of known deuterium content, and, with the assistance of volunteers, on native milkweeds throughout eastern North America. The results show that the stable hydrogen isotopic composition of monarch butterflies is highly correlated with the isotopic composition of the milkweed host plants, which in turn corresponds closely with the long-term geographic patterns of deuterium in rainfall. Stable-carbon isotope values in milkweed host plants were similarly correlated with those values in monarch butterflies and showed a general pattern of enrichment along a southwest to northeast gradient bisecting the Great Lakes. These findings indicate that natal origins of migratory and wintering monarchs in Mexico can be inferred from the combined δD and δ13C isotopic signatures in their wings. This relationship establishes that analysis of hydrogen and carbon isotopes can be used to answer questions concerning the biology of migratory monarch butterflies and provides a new approach to tracking similar migratory movements of other organisms. Received: 1 July 1998 / Accepted: 11 November 1998  相似文献   

16.
Because most plants require pollinator visits for seed production, the ability of an introduced plant species to establish pollinator relationships in a new ecosystem may have a central role in determining its success or failure as an invader. We investigated the pollination ecology of three milkweed species – Asclepias curassavica, Gomphocarpus fruticosus and G. physocarpus – in their invaded range in southeast Queensland, Australia. The complex floral morphology of milkweeds has often been interpreted as a general trend towards specialised pollination requirements. Based on this interpretation, invasion by milkweeds contradicts the expectation than plant species with specialised pollination systems are less likely to become invasive that those with more generalised pollination requirements. However, observations of flower visitors in natural populations of the three study species revealed that their pollination systems are essentially specialised at the taxonomic level of the order, but generalised at the species level. Specifically, pollinators of the two Gomphocarpus species included various species of Hymenoptera (particularly vespid wasps), while pollinators of A. curassavica were primarily Lepidoptera (particularly nymphalid butterflies). Pollinators of all three species are rewarded with copious amounts of highly concentrated nectar. It is likely that successful invasion by these three milkweed species is attributable, at least in part, to their generalised pollinator requirements. The results of this study are discussed in terms of how data from the native range may be useful in predicting pollination success of species in a new environment.  相似文献   

17.
Four milkweed associated insects were assayed for free D-alanine by gas-liquid chromatographic methods. Oncopeltus fasciatus and Lygaeus kalmii, reared aseptically on milkweed seeds, showed high titres of free D-alanine. Labidomera clivicollis showed traces of the D-isomer whereas none could be detected in Tetraopes tetrophthalmus. O.fasciatus reared aseptically on sunflower seed showed high titres of D-alanine. No D-alanine could be detected in milkweed seed hydrolysates. Several museum specimens of the orders Hemiptera and Homoptera were assayed and all showed high titres of D-alanine.  相似文献   

18.
Summary The impact of differences in host plants on individuals and populations of insect herbivores was investigated using the milkweed longhorn beetle, Tetraopes tetrophthalmus (Forster), larvae of which feed parasitically on host rhizomes. One host, Asclepias syriaca L., was larger in stem and rhizome diameter and grew in cooler soil than the other host, A. verticillata L. The major effects on beetles were retarded phenology at the cooler site and reduced size on the smaller host. Reduced size of beetles was correlated with several important individual attributes: reduced length of life, number of ovarioles, egg size, and a reduced probability of mating with large beetles. The population consequences of these characteristics, largely inferred from these observations, were little or no outbreeding in the small population on A. verticillata.  相似文献   

19.
SYNOPSIS. A total of 4,866 plants belonging to the family Asclepiadaceae was examined in the eastern part of the United States; 291 (6%) of 11 species naturally infected with Phytomonas elmassiani; 9 of these were new host records. Eight of the 9 infected species belonged to the genus Asclepias, one to Cynanchum. Infections were recorded between 25.5° and 41.0° N latitude, and from 74.0° to 90.5° west longitude. At the southernmost latitude Asclepias curassavica, an exotic annual, perennates, harbors phytomonads and is infested the year round with Oncopeltus. Usually but not always infection is correlated with the presence and abundance of insect vectors. The annual die-back of the usually infected perennial plant hosts, the uninfected emerging vernal growth, the reservoir nidus of infected plants in the southern latitudes, and the known proclivity of O. fasciatus to migrate suggest the spread of flagellosis of Asclepiadaceae thru migration of the vector hemipteron.  相似文献   

20.
Theoretical models of evolution in a temporally variable environment predict that genotypes with low variance in fitness across generations will be favored. When host use varies temporally and fitness trade-offs exist among hosts, such that an increase in performance on one host results in a correlated decrease on the other, selection for low variance in fitness across generations will favor genotypes which are generalists. Before predictions such as this can be extended to natural herbivore populations, however, it is necessary to understand the extent to which performance trade-offs limit simultaneous adaptation to multiple hosts. The experiment reported here compares two populations of the common milkweed bug, Lygaeus kalmii (Hemiptera: Lygaeidae) which differ in patterns of host usage. One population is largely restricted to milkweed (Asclepias spp.) when milkweed seeds are available, but becomes a scavenger on a large assortment of available seeds when milkweed seeds are unavailable. The second population is restricted largely to dandelion (Taraxacum officinale), without access to milkweed. We examine these populations to test for host-associated genetic trade-offs between specialization on dandelion (Taraxacum) and two species of milkweed, Asclepias fascicularis, which is low in cardiac glycoside content, and A. speciosa, which is high in cardiac glycoside content. Despite the difference in patterns of host use of the two L. kalmii populations, the populations did not differ in their performance on any of the host plants. Within each population, bugs performed nearly as well on each host, except that bugs had significantly lower survivorship on dandelion than on either milkweed species. Trade-offs in performance among hosts were not present in either population: estimated genetic correlations across hosts were strongly positive. The inability of this study to detect host-associated fitness trade-offs is consistent with most published data on this topic.  相似文献   

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