viernes, 4 de octubre de 2013

“Maternal instincts” seen in group of colorful beetles

A group of re­lat­ed, col­or­ful bee­tles in the thick fo­li­age of trop­i­cal forests shows signs of ma­ter­nal in­stincts and act­ive care, sci­en­tists say.
In a re­port, re­search­ers de­scribed “ma­ter­nal” be­hav­iors in eight spe­cies with­in a sub­family of leaf bee­tles known as broad-shouldered leaf bee­tles, or Chry­so­meli­nae. The find­ings were pub­lished in a spe­cial is­sue of the re­search jour­nal Zookeys.




Larvae of the spe­cies Dory­phora pay­kullimove am­ong leaves, fol­lowed by their mot­her, in Pa­na­ma. (Credit: S. Van Bael)

Moth­ers “ac­tively de­fend off­spring” as well as the eggs, wrote the re­search­ers, Don­ald M. Wind­sor of the Smith­so­nian Trop­i­cal Re­search In­sti­tute in Balboa-Ancon, Pan­a­ma, and col­leagues.

Maternal care in in­sects is rarely seen in such act­ive forms, though com­mon in lower-level forms such as in­sects posi­tioning their eggs so the new­borns will have ac­cess to a good food source.



Bee­tle moth­ers in two spe­cies within the Chry­so­meli­nae group treated the leaf on which their young­sters were born as a sort of nest to be pro­tected, the sci­en­tists found. The moth­ers re­acted ag­gres­sively to in­vaders, and charged to­ward the edge the leaf when a per­son put a thin stick in the ar­ea, they wrote. Stamp­ing and leaf-shak­ing were other com­mon re­act­ions, they added.


A cam­era held 10 cm (4 inches) un­der and to the side of the “na­tal leaf” got the strong­est re­ac­tion, according to the scien-tists. Moth­ers also were found to “guard” lar­vae by strad­dling them.


Oth­er spe­cies of bee­tles showed “less ag­gres­sive” forms of ma­ter­nal care, they added. The sci­en­tists said some moth­ers seem to make changes to the leaves where their off­spring are born. And once the young bee­tles, or lar­vae, are born, some moth­ers were de­scribed as “herd­ing” them to make them go in de­sired di­rec­tions and keep them to­geth­er in lit­tle groups.


The in­ves­ti­ga­tors said it’s not clear why these be­hav­iors evolved in these Cen­tral and South Amer­i­can bee­tles. “Large voids re­main in our un­der­stand­ing of the nat­u­ral his­to­ry of both groups, in­clud­ing the ident­ity and im­por­tance of preda­tors and par­a­sitoids and the di­verse ways in which moth­ers may be in­flu­enc­ing the sur­viv­al of off­spring,” Wind­sor and col­leagues wrote.

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