Apoptosis is observed during a spectrum of conditions including exogenous virus infection and endogenous cellular turnover. Adult female Aedes albopictus mosquitoes challenged with increasing titres of Sindbis virus (SINV) via intrathoracic inoculation demonstrated that the injection dosage did not result in significantly different levels of virus growth or mosquito survival at day 10 post-infection. Tissues probed for apoptosis using an in situ TUNEL assay revealed SINV-associated apoptotic cells scattered throughout the proximal and distal regions of the salivary gland (SG) lateral lobes but which were not detected in the median lobe or the midgut and hindgut.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnts can have important, but sometimes unexpected, effects on the plants they associate with. For carnivorous plants, associating with ants may provide defensive benefits in addition to nutritional ones. We examined the effects of increased ant visitation and exclusion of insect prey from pitchers of the hooded pitcher plant Sarracenia minor, which has been hypothesized to be an ant specialist.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAtmospheric CO2 concentrations have increased exponentially over the last century and continuing increases are expected to have significant effects on ecosystems. We investigated the interactions among atmospheric CO2, foliar quality, and herbivory within a scrub oak community at the Kennedy Space Center, Florida. Sixteen plots of open-top chambers were followed; eight of which were exposed to ambient levels of CO2 (350 ppm), and eight of which were exposed to elevated levels of CO2 (700 ppm).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFResource quality (plant nitrogen) and resource quantity (plant density) have often been argued to be among the most important factors influencing herbivore densities. A difficulty inherent in the studies that manipulate resource quality, by changing nutrient levels, is that resource quantity can be influenced simultaneously, i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe rising level of atmospheric CO2 has stimulated several recent studies attempting to predict the effects of increased CO2 on ecological communities. However, most of these studies have been conducted in the benign conditions of the laboratory and in the absence of herbivores. In the current study, we utilized large octagonal chambers, which enclosed portions of an intact scrub-oak community to investigate the interactive effects of CO2 and insect herbivory on myrtle oak, Quercus myrtifolia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe unabated increase in global atmospheric CO(2) is expected to induce physiological changes in plants, including reduced foliar nitrogen, which are likely to affect herbivore densities. This study employs a field-based CO(2 )enrichment experiment at Kennedy Space Center, Florida, to examine plant-herbivore (insect) interactions inside eight open-topped chambers with elevated CO(2) (710 ppm) and eight control chambers with ambient CO(2). In elevated CO(2) we found decreased herbivore densities per 100 leaves, especially of leaf miners, across all five plant species we examined: the oak trees Quercus myrtifolia, Q.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this study we investigated the potential importance of species identity and herbivore feeding mode in determining the strengths of top-down and bottom-up effects on phytophagous insect densities. In 1998, we conducted two factorial field experiments in which we manipulated host plant quality and intensity of parasitoid attack on three salt marsh herbivores, the planthoppers Prokelisia marginata and Pissonotus quadripustulatus (Homoptera: Delphacidae), which feed only on Spartina alterniflora and Borrichia frutescens, respectively, and the gall fly Asphondylia borrichiae (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae), which feeds only on B. frutescens.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe relative importance of bottom-up versus top-down forces, and the effect of productivity on community dynamics continue to be of much interest to ecologists. Trophic dynamic theories are difficult to test, as they require explicit knowledge of the many organisms involved, as well as the nature of the interactions between them. The Oksanen-Fretwell (OF) theory, which suggests that the relative roles of top-down and bottom-up factors vary with primary productivity, is well known in the literature, but is difficult to test rigorously.
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