5 results match your criteria: "UMR CNRS 7261 - University of Tours[Affiliation]"

Article Synopsis
  • Understanding sperm storage dynamics is key to exploring post-copulatory sexual selection in species that fertilize internally.
  • In the black soldier fly (BSF), sperm is stored in special compartments, with only about 49% of transferred sperm reaching the storage areas after mating.
  • Analysis reveals that while some sperm decline in numbers and viability in the transfer area, female BSFs can still produce multiple fertile clutches after just one mating, highlighting the importance of studying BSF as a model for sexual selection.
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Why do repellents repel?

Curr Opin Insect Sci

December 2024

Institut de Recherche sur la Biologie de l'Insecte, UMR CNRS 7261 - University of Tours, France. Electronic address:

Article Synopsis
  • Repellents are essential for protecting humans and animals from insect bites and controlling vector-borne diseases, with various natural and synthetic options available.
  • Not all repellents are equally effective or safe for humans, animals, or the environment, highlighting the need for new, nontoxic alternatives.
  • There’s a significant gap in understanding how these repellents work, including DEET, which has been the standard for decades, prompting the call for further research to improve repellent efficacy and safety.
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Insects are the most evolutionarily and ecologically successful group of living animals, being present in almost all possible mainland habitats; however, they are virtually absent in the ocean, which constitutes more than 99% of the Earth's biosphere. Only a few insect species can be found in the sea but they remain at the surface, in salt marshes, estuaries, or shallow waters. Remarkably, a group of 13 species manages to endure long immersion periods in the open sea, as well as deep dives, i.

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Blood as fuel: the metabolic cost of pedestrian locomotion in .

J Exp Biol

January 2021

Institut de Recherche sur la Biologie de l'Insecte, UMR CNRS 7261 - University of Tours, 37200 Tours, France

Active searching for vertebrate blood is a necessary activity for haematophagous insects, and it can be assumed that this search should also be costly in terms of energetic expenditure. Whether by swimming, walking, running or flying, active movement requires energy, increasing metabolic rate relative to resting situations. We analysed the respiratory pattern and energetic cost of pedestrian locomotion in the blood-sucking bug using flow-through respirometry, by measuring carbon dioxide emission and water loss before, during and after walking.

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Lice from pinnipeds - sea lions, seals and walruses - are the only insects capable of surviving marine dives. Throughout their evolutionary history, they have adapted to tolerate hypoxia, high salinity, low temperature and, in particular, to tolerate conditions of high hydrostatic pressure. To understand the limits of the capacity of lice to survive during host deep dives, we conducted a series of controlled experiments in the laboratory.

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