نتایج جستجو برای: proboscis

تعداد نتایج: 753  

2011
Anna-Laetitia Hikl Harald W. Krenn

Pollen feeding behaviors Heliconius and Laparus (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae) represent a key innovation that has shaped other life history traits of these neotropical butterflies. Although all flower visiting Lepidoptera regularly come in contact with pollen, only Heliconius and Laparus butterflies actively collect pollen with the proboscis and subsequently take up nutrients from the pollen grain...

2013
JULIA ANNE-SOPHIE BAUDER STEPHAN HANDSCHUH BRIAN DOUGLAS METSCHER HARALD WOLFGANG KRENN

An assessment of the anatomical costs of extremely long proboscid mouthparts can contribute to the understanding of the evolution of form and function in the context of insect feeding behaviour. An integrative analysis of expenses relating to an exceptionally long proboscis in butterflies includes all organs involved in fluid feeding, such as the proboscis plus its musculature, sensilla, and fo...

Journal: :Journal of morphology 2016
Matthew S Lehnert Charles E Beard Patrick D Gerard Konstantin G Kornev Peter H Adler

Most butterflies and moths (Lepidoptera) use modified mouthparts, the proboscis, to acquire fluids. We quantified the proboscis architecture of five butterfly species in three families to test the hypothesis that proboscis structure relates to feeding guild. We used scanning electron microscopy to elucidate the fine structure of the proboscis of both sexes and to quantify dimensions, cuticular ...

2016
Daniel P. Cariveau Geetha K. Nayak Ignasi Bartomeus Joseph Zientek John S. Ascher Jason Gibbs Rachael Winfree

Allometric relationships among morphological traits underlie important patterns in ecology. These relationships are often phylogenetically shared; thus quantifying allometric relationships may allow for estimating difficult-to-measure traits across species. One such trait, proboscis length in bees, is assumed to be important in structuring bee communities and plant-pollinator networks. However,...

Journal: :Journal of the Royal Society, Interface 2013
Matthew S Lehnert Daria Monaenkova Taras Andrukh Charles E Beard Peter H Adler Konstantin G Kornev

Mouthparts of fluid-feeding insects have unique material properties with no human-engineered analogue: the feeding devices acquire sticky and viscous liquids while remaining clean. We discovered that the external surface of the butterfly proboscis has a sharp boundary separating a hydrophilic drinking region and a hydrophobic non-drinking region. The structural arrangement of the proboscis prov...

Journal: :The Laryngoscope 1977

2005
A. D. BALL E. B. ANDREWS J. D. TAYLOR

The ontogeny of the proboscis in Nucella lapillus was investigated using light and scanning electron microscopy. The proboscis develops by elongation of the body wall surrounding the mouth, whilst the rhynchocoel is formed by imagination of the body wall surrounding the proboscis. Elongation of the snout during development of the proboscis results in the anterior movement of the anterior oesoph...

Journal: :Learning & memory 2005
Ricarda Scheiner Anthea Kuritz-Kaiser Randolf Menzel Joachim Erber

In tactile learning, sucrose is the unconditioned stimulus and reward, which is usually applied to the antenna to elicit proboscis extension and which the bee can drink when it is subsequently applied to the extended proboscis. The conditioned stimulus is a tactile object that the bee can scan with its antennae. In this paper we describe the quantitative relationships between gustatory antennal...

2005
MICHAEL S. BERRY

1. Each salivary gland cell of Haementeria extends a single process, or ductule, anteriorly into the proboscis; secretory products are released at the ductule ending. Some ductules secrete into the lumen of the proboscis and others at the outer surface of its tip, more than 5 cm from the gland in large leeches. 2. Depolarization of a gland-cell body elicits action potentials which appear to be ...

Journal: :The Journal of experimental biology 2014
Chen-Chih Tsai Daria Monaenkova Charles E Beard Peter H Adler Konstantin G Kornev

Fluid-feeding Lepidoptera use an elongated proboscis, conventionally modeled as a drinking straw, to feed from pools and films of liquid. Using the monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus (Linnaeus), we show that the inherent structural features of the lepidopteran proboscis contradict the basic assumptions of the drinking-straw model. By experimentally characterizing permeability and flow in the p...

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