نتایج جستجو برای: impact of sex pheromones

تعداد نتایج: 21213269  

2013
Fanny Beauché Freddie-Jeanne Richard

Mate choice is mediated by many components with the criteria varying across the animal kingdom. Chemical cues used for mate attractiveness can also reflect mate quality. Regarding the gregarious species Armadillidium vulgare (isopod crustacean), we tested whether individuals can discriminate conspecifics at two different levels (between sex and physiological status) based on olfactory perceptio...

Journal: :The Journal of experimental biology 2012
Fernando Guerrieri Cesar Gemeno Christelle Monsempes Sylvia Anton Emmanuelle Jacquin-Joly Philippe Lucas Jean-Marc Devaud

Sex pheromones are intraspecific olfactory signals emitted by one sex to attract a potential mating partner. Behavioural responses to sex pheromones are generally highly stereotyped. However, they can be modulated by experience, as male moths previously exposed to female sex pheromone respond with a lower threshold upon further detection, even after long delays. Here, we address the question of...

Journal: :Current Biology 2007
Jamie Q. White Thomas J. Nicholas Jeff Gritton Long Truong Eliott R. Davidson Erik M. Jorgensen

BACKGROUND Why do males and females behave differently? Sexually dimorphic behaviors could arise from sex-specific neurons or by the modification of circuits present in both sexes. C. elegans males exhibit different behaviors than hermaphrodites. Although there is a single class of sex-specific sensory neurons in the head of males, most of their neurons are part of a core nervous system also pr...

2013
H. Young R. A. Galbreath M. H. Benn V. A. Holt D. L. Struble

Sex Pheromone, (Z)-5-Tetradecenyl Acetate, (Z)-8-Tetradecenyl Acetate, Ctenopseustis obli­ quana, Tortricidae The sex pheromone of Ctenopseustis obliquana was found to contain (Z)-8-tetradecenyl acetate and (Z)-5-tetradecenyl acetate in approximately 4:1 ratio. No A 11 -tetradecenyl compound was detected in C. obliquana, in contrast with the pheromones thus far reported from species of the trib...

2009
Troy R. Shirangi Héloïse D. Dufour Thomas M. Williams Sean B. Carroll

A wide range of organisms use sex pheromones to communicate with each other and to identify appropriate mating partners. While the evolution of chemical communication has been suggested to cause sexual isolation and speciation, the mechanisms that govern evolutionary transitions in sex pheromone production are poorly understood. Here, we decipher the molecular mechanisms underlying the rapid ev...

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