The well-known English naturalist John Ray wrote more than 200 years ago about the curious reaction of cats to a plant in the mint or Lamiaceae family, the catnip plant . Ray even wrote a short verse about the relationship between cats and catnip: 'If you set it the cats will eat it; If you sow it the cats can't know it' (Considine 2016). When leaves of this plant are bruised and release their volatiles, cats react by attempting to rub and roll over on the leaves, seeming to be in a state of ecstasy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEver since language and script evolved, humans have documented their own lives, their business transactions, the lives of animals and of plants, and the movements of the stars. The earliest recorded diary was kept by Merer, who lived at the time of the construction of the Great Pyramid of Giza; Merer writes about the Tura limestone that he loaded on his boat to take down the Nile to the site of pyramid construction. This was nearly 4500 years ago.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFood is a serious business, for humans, for non-human animals, and for plants. Humans are the only animals that have monetised and trade food, although some spiders, crickets, and birds engage in nuptial gifts of food to facilitate mating. In crickets, males offer food produced from special glands to feed females; spider males themselves form the tasty morsel during the mating process, and birds offer favoured fruit or insects to females in courtship rituals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn essential adaptive strategy in insects is the evolution of olfactory receptors (ORs) to recognize important volatile environmental chemical cues. Our model species, Ceratosolen fusciceps, a specialist wasp pollinator of Ficus racemosa, likely possesses an OR repertoire that allows it to distinguish fig-specific volatiles in highly variable environments. Using a newly assembled genome-guided transcriptome, we annotated 63 ORs in the species and reconstructed the phylogeny of Ceratosolen ORs in conjunction with other hymenopteran species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Opin Insect Sci
October 2024
Parasitoids constantly evaluate their environment to optimise oviposition host utilisation based on their life history parameters and host characteristics, including density. Any factors impairing chemosensory perception, learning and memory of oviposition decisions negatively impact fitness. In the Anthropocene, stressors, for example, elevated temperatures, Wolbachia infection (likely modulated by temperature), pesticides, light pollution and water deficits in plants that provide resources for parasitoid hosts, impact parasitoid oviposition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMutualisms are consumer-resource interactions, in which goods and services are exchanged. Biological market theory states that exchanges should be regulated by both partners. However, most studies on mutualisms are one-sided, focusing on the control exercised by host organisms on their symbionts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClimate anxiety is as newly recognised a phenomenon as is the neologism solastalgia. The word solastalgia was coined by the Australian environmental philosopher Glenn Albrecht; it is a composite of the concepts of solace and desolation, and the pain ('algia') derived from the immediate loss of or assault to one's place of residence (Albrecht 2005). It is different from nostalgia, which is the remembrance of times past, and it specifically refers to the mental distress caused by climate change of anthropogenic origin (Albrecht et al.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHumans communicate aggression through words, gestures, guns, bombs, and missiles. Guns, bombs, and missiles are left out of expressions of affection, unless they are meant to impress a loved one or affirm a beloved ideology. Many organisms other than humans use gestures although they may not have words, and the vast majority of organisms also use the language of chemistry in offence and defence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe 1920s mark the rise of robots in the human lexicon. Karel Capek, a Czech playwright, wrote , which stands for or . The word for worker or labourer in Czech is ; Karel was given the idea for this word by his artist brother Josef, and the word robot for a humanmanufactured humanoid entity was born in 1920.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe world received a confidence booster in the power of the scientific method, having witnessed and participated in the recent development of successful vaccines against SARS-COV-2. The world also got a peek into scientific controversies, the clamour for more transparency and data sharing, besides the requirement for rigorous testing, adequate sample sizes, false positives, false negatives, risk probabilities, and population variation. For an interested lay person, or even for a practising scientist, this was the equivalent of a crash course on the world stage on how science is done, warts and all, but where science triumphed in the end.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHitchhikers (phoretic organisms) need vehicles to disperse out of unsuitable habitats. Therefore, finding vehicles with the right functional attributes is essential for phoretic organisms. To locate these vehicles, phoretic organisms employ cues within modalities, ranging from visual to chemical senses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHitchhikers (phoretic organisms) identify their vehicles using species-specific visual, chemical and vibrational cues. However, what factors influence their choice between vehicles of the same species has rarely been investigated. Hitchhikers must not only avoid overcrowded vehicles but may also need to travel with conspecifics to ensure mates at their destination.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMetacommunity membership is influenced by habitat availability and trophic requirements. However, for multitrophic horizontally transmitted symbiont communities that are closely associated with hosts, symbiont-host interactions may affect membership criteria in novel ways. For example, failure of beneficial services from symbionts could influence the host, and in turn, the entire community.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoil is used for the construction of structures by many animals, at times admixed with endogenous secretions. These additives, along with soil components, are suggested to have a role in biocementation. However, the relative contribution of endogenous and exogenous materials to soil strength has not been adequately established.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMass-energy transfer across the boundaries of living systems is crucial for the maintenance of homeostasis; however, it is scarcely known how structural strength and integrity is maintained in extended phenotypes while also achieving optimum heat-mass exchange. Here we present data on strength, stability, porosity and permeability of termite mounds of a fungus-farming species, Odontotermes obesus. We demonstrate that the termite mound is a bi-layered structure with a dense, strong core and a porous shell that is constantly remodelled.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCommunities in which species are obligately associated with a single host are ideal to test adaptive responses of community traits to host-imposed selection because such communities are often highly insulated. Fig species provide oviposition resources to co-evolved fig-wasp communities. Dispersing fig-wasp communities move from one host plant to another for oviposition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Plant Sci
August 2018
Galls are the product of enclosed internal herbivory where the gall maker induces a plant structure within which the herbivores complete their development. For successful sustained herbivory, gall makers must (1) suppress the induction of plant defenses in response to herbivory that is usually mediated through the jasmonic acid pathway and involves volatile organic compound (VOC) production, or (2) have mechanisms to cope with herbivory-induced VOCs, or (3) manipulate production of VOCs to their own advantage. Similarly, plants may have mechanisms (1) to avoid VOC suppression or (2) to attract galler enemies such as parasitoids.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe night is a special niche characterized by dim light, lower temperatures, and higher humidity compared to the day. Several animals have made the transition from the day into the night and have acquired unique adaptations to cope with the challenges of performing nocturnal activities. Several plant species have opted to bloom at night, possibly as a response to aridity to prevent excessive water loss through evapotranspiration since flowering is often a water-demanding process, or to protect pollen from heat stress.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the fig-fig wasp nursery pollination system, parasitic wasps, such as gallers and parasitoids that oviposit from the exterior into the fig syconium (globular, enclosed inflorescence) are expected to use a variety of chemical cues for successful location of their hidden hosts. Behavioral assays were performed with freshly eclosed naive galler wasps. Syconia with different oviposition histories, i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study investigated for the first time the impact of the internal mound environment of fungus-growing termites on the growth of fungal crop parasites. Mounds of the termite Odontotermes obesus acted as (i) temperature and relative humidity (RH) 'stabilisers' showing dampened daily variation and (ii) 'extreme environments' exhibiting elevated RH and CO levels, compared to the outside. Yet, internal temperatures exhibited seasonal dynamics as did daily and seasonal CO levels.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The combined influence of life-history strategy and resource dispersion on dispersal evolution of a biological community, and by extension, on community assemblage, has received sparse attention. Highly specialized fig wasp communities are ideal for addressing this question since the life-history strategies that affect their pace of life and the dispersion of their oviposition resources vary. We compared dispersal capacities of the wasp community of a widespread tropical fig, , by measuring flight durations, somatic lipid content and resting metabolic rates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMutualistic associations such as the fungal farms of insects are prone to parasitism and are consequently vulnerable to attack by weeds and pests. Therefore, efficient farm management requires quick detection of weeds for their elimination. Furthermore, if the available weedicides are non-specific, then the ability of insects to discriminate between crop and weeds becomes essential for targeted application of such compounds.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSymbiosis is a process that can generate evolutionary novelties and can extend the phenotypic niche space of organisms. Symbionts can act together with their hosts to co-construct host organs, within which symbionts are housed. Once established within hosts, symbionts can also influence various aspects of host phenotype, such as resource acquisition, protection from predation by acquisition of toxicity, as well as behaviour.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF