نتایج جستجو برای: pieridae

تعداد نتایج: 351  

2011
Julieta Ramos-Elorduy José MP Moreno Adolfo I Vázquez Ivonne Landero Héctor Oliva-Rivera Víctor HM Camacho

In this paper, we reported the butterflies and moths that are consumed in Mexico. We identified 67 species of Lepidoptera that are eaten principally in their larval stage in 17 states of Mexico. These species belong to 16 families: Arctiidae, Bombycidae, Castniidae, Cossidae, Geometridae, Hepialidae, Hesperiidae, Lasiocampidae, Noctuidae, Nymphalidae, Papilionidae, Pieridae, Pyralidae, Saturnii...

2014
Juan-Juan Hao Jia-Sheng Hao Xiao-Yan Sun Lan-Lan Zhang Qun Yang

The complete mitochondrial genomes of Leptidea morsei Fenton (Lepidoptera: Pieridae: Dis-morphiinae) and Catopsilia pomona (F.) (Lepidoptera: Pieridae: Coliadinae) were determined to be 15,122 and 15,142 bp in length, respectively, with that of L. morsei being the smallest among all known butterflies. Both mitogenomes contained 37 genes and an A+T-rich region, with the gene order identical to t...

2012
Angus R Westgarth-Smith David B Roy Martin Scholze Allan Tucker John P Sumpter

1. The North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) exerts considerable control on U.K. weather. This study investigates the impact of the NAO on butterfly abundance and phenology using 34 years of data from the U.K. Butterfly Monitoring Scheme (UKBMS).2. The study uses a multi-species indicator to show that the NAO does not affect overall U.K. butterfly population size. However, the abundance of bivoltine...

2010
Benjamin Bergerot Romain Julliard Michel Baguette

BACKGROUND The metacommunity framework is crucial to the study of functional relations along environmental gradients. Changes in resource grain associated with increasing habitat fragmentation should generate uncoupled responses of interacting species with contrasted dispersal abilities. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS Here we tested whether the intensity of parasitism was modified by increasi...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2002
Scott R Smedley Frank C Schroeder Douglas B Weibel Jerrold Meinwald Katie A Lafleur J Alan Renwick Ronald Rutowski Thomas Eisner

Larvae of the European cabbage butterfly, Pieris rapae (Pieridae), are beset with glandular hairs, bearing droplets of a clear oily secretion at their tip. The fluid consists primarily of a series of chemically labile, unsaturated lipids, the mayolenes, which are derived from 11-hydroxylinolenic acid. In bioassays with the ant Crematogaster lineolata, the secretion was shown to be potently dete...

Journal: :Commagene journal of biology 2022

Proboscis structure and sensilla types are important morphological characters for the systematic analysis of Lepidoptera families. There is no study on proboscis Aporia crataegi (Linnaeus, 1758) (Lepidoptera: Pieridae) despite fact that it an pest. For this purpose, A. were investigated by using stereomicroscope scanning electron microscope in detail. The results show has three sensillum (sensi...

Journal: :Shilap-revista De Lepidopterologia 2023

The survey carried out in March - December 2021 has revealed the presence of Forty-seven Rhopalocera species under families: Hesperiidae, Lycaenidae, Nymphalidae, Papilionidae and Pieridae, belonging to 37 genera five families from district Srinagar.

2013
Juha Laiho Gunilla Ståhls

A majority of the known Colias species (Lepidoptera: Pieridae, Coliadinae) occur in the mountainous regions of Central-Asia, vast areas that are hard to access, rendering the knowledge of many species limited due to the lack of extensive sampling. Two gene regions, the mitochondrial COI 'barcode' region and the nuclear ribosomal protein RpS2 gene region were used for exploring the utility of th...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2007
Christopher W Wheat Heiko Vogel Ute Wittstock Michael F Braby Dessie Underwood Thomas Mitchell-Olds

Ehrlich and Raven formally introduced the concept of stepwise coevolution using butterfly and angiosperm interactions in an attempt to account for the impressive biological diversity of these groups. However, many biologists currently envision butterflies evolving 50 to 30 million years (Myr) after the major angiosperm radiation and thus reject coevolutionary origins of butterfly biodiversity. ...

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