| Literature DB >> 21861659 |
Alfonso Pescador-Rubio1, Sergio G Stanford-Camargo, Luis E Páez-Gerardo, Alberto J Ramírez-Reyes, René A Ibarra-Jiménez, Terrence D Fitzgerald.
Abstract
A pheromone is implicated in the trail marking behavior of caterpillars of the nymphalid silverspot butterfly, Dione juno huascuma (Reakirt) (Lepidoptera: Heliconiinae) that feed gregariously on Passiflora (Malpighiales: Passifloraceae) vines in Mexico. Although they mark pathways leading from one feeding site to another with silk, this study shows that the silk was neither adequate nor necessary to elicit trail following behavior. Caterpillars marked trails with a long-lived pheromone that was deposited when they brushed the ventral surfaces of the tips of their abdomens along branch pathways. The caterpillars distinguished between pathways deposited by different numbers of siblings and between trails of different ages. Caterpillars also preferentially followed the trails of conspecifics over those of another nymphalid, Nymphalis antiopa L., the mourning cloak butterfly.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21861659 PMCID: PMC3281466 DOI: 10.1673/031.011.5501
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Insect Sci ISSN: 1536-2442 Impact factor: 1.857
Video 1. Y constructed from sections of a paper strip over which caterpillars of Dione juno huascuma had previously walked (stem and right arm). A strip not previously walked on by caterpillars (blank) forms the left arm. The response of a caterpillar allowed to choose between the arms is shown. Click image to view video. Download Video.
Figure 1. Longitudinally folded paper strip bent to form the stem and arms of a Y. The Y is inserted into a slotted wooden block. Scale Bar = cm. High quality figures are available online.