Vertebrate blood is essential for the growth and the reproduction of haematophagous insects. Provided that hosts play the double role of food sources and predators, feeding on their blood exposes these insects to a high predation risk. Therefore, it is expected that host seeking occurs only when insects need to feed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe source of blood of most haematophagous insects plays at the same time the double role of host and potential predator. Feeding behaviour should be triggered only when necessary and should be completed as quickly as possible. From an epidemiological point of view, this modulation has an impact on the feeding frequency of disease vectors and, as a consequence, on the transmission of parasites.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOogenesis of the parasitoid wasp Eupelmus vuilleti is known to be dependent on host availability. However, examination of ovarian dynamics by microscopy showed that oogenesis and vitellogenesis are initiated before female eclosion and proceed 1-2 days after, independent of host presence. Oogenesis continued beyond the 2nd day only in the presence of hosts, otherwise it was replaced by egg resorption.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIt has been demonstrated in several insect species that a circadian clock makes the whole of antennal chemoreceptors more sensitive during a particular temporal window every day. This assessment raises the question about how insects exhibiting bimodal activity handle their sensitivity to odours which are relevant at different moments of the day. To shed some light on this problem, we studied in Rhodnius prolixus the daily dynamics of their responsiveness to CO(2) (host-associated cue) and aggregation cues (refuge-associated), which are relevant at dusk and dawn, respectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArch Insect Biochem Physiol
June 2007
Eupelmus vuilleti (Hymenoptera; Eupelmidae) is a solitary ectoparasitoid producing yolk-rich eggs. The female oviposits mainly on the fourth larval instar of Callosobruchus maculatus (Coleoptera; Bruchidae), which develop within pods and seeds of Vigna unguiculata (Fabacae). Parasitoid females are synovigenic, i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEupelmus vuilleti (Hymenoptera; Eupelmidae) is a host feeding ectoparasitoid of fourth-instar larvae or pupae of Callosobruchus maculatus (Coleoptera; Bruchidae) infecting Vigna unguiculata seed and pods (Fabacae). Parasitoid females are synovigenic, i.e.
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