keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38622804/clonal-genomic-population-structure-of-beauveria-brongniartii-and-beauveria-pseudobassiana-pathogens-of-the-common-european-cockchafer-melolontha-melolontha-l
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Chiara Pedrazzini, Stephen A Rehner, Hermann Strasser, Niklaus Zemp, Rolf Holderegger, Franco Widmer, Jürg Enkerli
Beauveria brongniartii is a fungal pathogen that infects the beetle Melolontha melolontha, a significant agricultural pest in Europe. While research has primarily focused on the use of B. brongniartii for controlling M. melolontha, the genomic structure of the B. brongniartii population remains unknown. This includes whether its structure is influenced by its interaction with M. melolontha, the timing of beetle-swarming flights, geographical factors, or reproductive mode. To address this, we analysed genome-wide SNPs to infer the population genomics of Beauveria spp...
April 2024: Environmental Microbiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38620009/a-high-quality-genome-of-the-convergent-lady-beetle-hippodamia-convergens
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gavrila Ang, Andrew Zhang, John Obrycki, Arun Sethuraman
Here we describe a high quality genome assembly and annotation of the convergent lady beetle, Hippodamia convergens (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae). The highest quality unmasked genome comprises 619 Megabases (Mb) of chromosomal DNA, organized into 899 contigs, with a contig N50 score of 89 Mbps. The genome was assessed to be 96% complete (BUSCO). Reconstruction of a whole genome phylogeny resolved H. convergens as sister to the Harlequin lady beetle, Harmonia axyridis, and nested within a clade of several known agricultural pests...
April 15, 2024: G3: Genes—Genomes—Genetics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38617101/%C3%AF-new-records-of-rove-beetles-from-the-province-of-quebec-and-additional-provincial-records-in-canada-coleoptera-staphylinidae
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nicolas Bédard, Adam Brunke, Pierrick Bloin, Ludovic Leclerc
We newly report 25 provincial records of rove beetles (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae) from the province of Quebec from the following subfamilies: Steninae (1), Euaesthetinae (1), Omaliinae (2), Oxyporinae (1), Paederinae (1), Proteininae (1), Pselaphinae (2), Scaphidiinae (2), Scydmaeninae (2), Staphylininae (11) and Tachyporinae (1). Among these, two species are also reported for the first time from Ontario, two from Nova Scotia, and five are new Canadian records. We also report the first supporting data for Suniusmelanocephalus (Fabricius, 1792) and Scopaeusminutus Erichson, 1840 for Quebec, and of Arpediumschwarzi Fauvel, 1878, Phyllodrepapunctiventris (Fauvel, 1878), and Sepedophilusbasalis (Erichson, 1839) for Ontario...
2024: ZooKeys
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38616097/size-structure-property-relationship-of-wood-particles-in-aqueous-and-dry-insulative-foams
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Elizabeth Dobrzanski, Elisa S Ferreira, Praphulla Tiwary, Prashant Agrawal, Richard Chen, Emily D Cranston
Three size-fractionated samples of pine beetle-killed wood particles were used to prepare lightweight insulative foams. The foams were produced by foam-forming an aqueous slurry containing wood particles (125-1000 μm), a polymer binder, and surfactant, followed by oven drying. The effect of wood particle size on the aqueous foam stability, structure, and performance of insulative foams was investigated. While all aqueous foams were highly stable, aqueous foam stability increased with decreasing particle size...
July 1, 2024: Carbohydrate Polymers
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38615992/analysis-of-microbial-composition-of-edible-insect-products-available-for-human-consumption-within-the-united-states-using-traditional-microbiological-methods-and-whole-genome-sequencing
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Amrit Pal, Amy Mann, Henk C den Bakker
Edible insects offer a promising protein source for humans, but their food safety risks have not been previously investigated within the United States. Therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate the microbial content of processed edible insect products. A total of eight different types of edible insect products, including diving beetles, silkworms, grasshoppers, Jamaican crickets, mealworms, mole crickets, whole roasted crickets, and 100 % pure cricket powder, were purchased from large online retailer for the analysis...
April 12, 2024: Journal of Food Protection
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38611736/potential-of-thuja-occidentalis-l-essential-oil-and-water-extracts-against-field-crop-pests
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Janina Gospodarek, Agnieszka Krajewska, Iwona B Paśmionka, Joanna Bruździńska, Gedyon Tamiru
Thuja occidentalis L. essential oil (EOTO) and its compounds, such as terpinyl acetate, bornyl acetate, and β-thujone, are claimed to be highly effective against some storage pests, sanitary insects, or pests of fruit trees, while data about its use in protecting field crops are very scarce. There is also a lack of information in the literature about the insecticidal value of water extracts from T. occidentalis (WETOs). Both essential oils (EOs) and water extracts (WEs) from various plants have advantages and disadvantages in terms of their use as insecticides...
March 24, 2024: Molecules: a Journal of Synthetic Chemistry and Natural Product Chemistry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38608026/drought-and-heat-induced-mortality-of-conifer-trees-is-explained-by-leaf-and-growth-legacies
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Frank J Sterck, Yanjun Song, Lourens Poorter
An increased frequency and severity of droughts and heat waves have resulted in increased tree mortality and forest dieback across the world, but underlying mechanisms are poorly understood. We used a common garden experiment with 20 conifer tree species to quantify mortality after three consecutive hot, dry summers and tested whether mortality could be explained by putative underlying mechanisms, such as stem hydraulics and legacies affected by leaf life span and stem growth responses to previous droughts...
April 12, 2024: Science Advances
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38602442/the-paralobe-a-new-diagnostic-and-synapomorphic-character-for-the-genera-paulipalpina-gnaspini-peck-1996-and-parapaulipalpina-gnaspini-1996-leiodidae-cholevinae-ptomaphagini
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Eduardo C Gomyde, Bruno A S de Medeiros, Pedro Gnaspini
In insect taxa with homogeneous external morphology, genital structures often emerge as essential traits for interspecific differentiation. In the tribe Ptomaphagini (Coleoptera, Leiodidae, Cholevinae), precise identification often depends on analyzing the male genital morphology, even at the genus level. Here, we present a new character for diagnosing the genera Paulipalpina Gnaspini & Peck, 1996 and Parapaulipalpina Gnaspini, 1996. This feature, which we dub 'paralobe', is a projection arising from the internal surface of the right lobe of the aedeagal apex...
April 2024: Journal of Morphology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38600043/impact-of-aphis-pomi-tending-formica-rufa-hymenoptera-formicidae-on-biological-parameters-of-hippodamia-variegata-coleoptera-coccinellidae
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Arshid Ahmad Mir, Sheikh Khursheed, Barkat Hussain, Bhagyashree Dhekale, Gh Hassan Rather, Bilal A Padder, Hamidullah Itoo, Zahoor Ahmad Bhat, Mohd Amin Mir, Rafiq A Shah
One of the key reasons for the poor performance of natural enemies of honeydew-producing insect pests is mutualism between ants and some aphid species. The findings demonstrated that red wood ant, Formica rufa Linnaeus (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) had a deleterious impact on different biological parameters of the lady beetle, Hippodamia variegata Goeze (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae). H. variegata laid far fewer eggs in ant-tended aphid colonies, laying nearly 2.5 times more eggs in ant absence. Ants antennated and bit the lady beetle eggs, resulting in significantly low egg hatching of 66 per cent over 85 per cent in ant absent treatments...
April 11, 2024: Bulletin of Entomological Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38596291/a-dual-luciferase-bioluminescence-system-for-the-assessment-of-cellular-therapies
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alejandro G Torres Chavez, Mary K McKenna, Kishore Balasubramanian, Lisa Riffle, Nimit L Patel, Joseph D Kalen, Brad St Croix, Ann M Leen, Pradip Bajgain
Bioluminescence imaging is a well-established platform for evaluating engineered cell therapies in preclinical studies. However, despite the discovery of new luciferases and substrates, optimal combinations to simultaneously monitor two cell populations remain limited. This makes the functional assessment of cellular therapies cumbersome and expensive, especially in preclinical in vivo models. In this study, we explored the potential of using a green bioluminescence-emitting click beetle luciferase, CBG99, and a red bioluminescence-emitting firefly luciferase mutant, Akaluc, together to simultaneously monitor two cell populations...
March 21, 2024: Mol Ther Oncol
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38595804/correction-to-geometry-for-low-inertia-aerosol-capture-lessons-from-fog-basking-beetles
#31
(no author information available yet)
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1093/pnasnexus/pgae077.].
April 2024: PNAS Nexus
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38593850/spillover-effects-from-invasive-acacia-alter-the-plant-pollinator-networks-and-seed-production-of-native-plants
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maisie F Brett, Paula Strauss, Kurt van Wyk, Ian P Vaughan, Jane Memmott
Invasive flowering plants can disrupt plant-pollinator networks. This is well documented where invasives occur amongst native plants; however, the potential for 'spillover' effects of invasives that form stands in adjacent habitats are less well understood. Here we quantify the impact of two invasive Australian species, Acacia saligna and Acacia longifolia , on the plant-pollinator networks in fynbos habitats in South Africa. We compared networks from replicate 1 ha plots of native vegetation ( n = 21) that were subjected to three treatments: (1) at least 400 m from flowering Acacia; (2) adjacent to flowering Acacia , or (3) adjacent to flowering Acacia where all Acacia flowers were manually removed...
April 10, 2024: Proceedings. Biological Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38593308/looking-across-the-gap-understanding-the-evolution-of-eyes-and-vision-among-insects
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maike Kittelmann, Alistair P McGregor
The compound eyes of insects exhibit stunning variation in size, structure, and function, which has allowed these animals to use their vision to adapt to a huge range of different environments and lifestyles, and evolve complex behaviors. Much of our knowledge of eye development has been learned from Drosophila, while visual adaptations and behaviors are often more striking and better understood from studies of other insects. However, recent studies in Drosophila and other insects, including bees, beetles, and butterflies, have begun to address this gap by revealing the genetic and developmental bases of differences in eye morphology and key new aspects of compound eye structure and function...
April 9, 2024: BioEssays: News and Reviews in Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38592125/the-oviposition-preference-and-offspring-performance-of-aethina-tumida-coleoptera-nitidulidae
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Xinyu Yang, Mei Wang, Yifan Gu, Wensu Han, Xiaoyu Li, Xiang Li, Yihai Zhong, Jinglin Gao
Given the rapid spread and potential harm caused by the small hive beetle, Aethina tumida (Coleoptera: Nitidulidae) in China, it has become imperative to comprehend the developmental biology of this invasive species. Currently, there is limited knowledge regarding the impact of A. tumida female oviposition site preference on larval growth and development. To examine this, we investigated the ovipositional preference of adult female A. tumida on bee pupae, beebread, banana, and honey through a free choice test...
April 9, 2024: Journal of Economic Entomology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38588895/sub-lethal-effects-of-the-insecticide-imidacloprid-on-the-responses-of-damselfly-larvae-to-chemosensory-cues-indicating-predation-risk
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Prashani D Wickramasingha, Christy A Morrissey, Iain D Phillips, Adam L Crane, Douglas P Chivers, Maud C O Ferrari
Insecticides, including the widely used neonicotinoids, can affect both pest and non-target species. In addition to lethal effects, these insecticides at sub-lethal levels may cause disruption to sensory perception and processing leading to behavioural impairments. In this laboratory experiment, we investigated the effects of a 10-day exposure to the neonicotinoid insecticide, imidacloprid, on the behaviour of larvae of the damselfly, Lestes congener. In tests of baseline activity, imidacloprid concentrations of 1...
April 6, 2024: Chemosphere
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38575982/histone-deacetylases-regulate-organ-specific-growth-in-a-horned-beetle
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yonggang Hu, Jordan R Crabtree, Anna L M Macagno, Armin P Moczek
BACKGROUND: Nutrient availability is among the most widespread means by which environmental variability affects developmental outcomes. Because almost all cells within an individual organism share the same genome, structure-specific growth responses must result from changes in gene regulation. Earlier work suggested that histone deacetylases (HDACs) may serve as epigenetic regulators linking nutritional conditions to trait-specific development. Here we expand on this work by assessing the function of diverse HDACs in the structure-specific growth of both sex-shared and sex-specific traits including evolutionarily novel structures in the horned dung beetle Onthophagus taurus...
April 5, 2024: EvoDevo
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38573966/construction-of-the-single-diamond-structured-titania-scaffold-recreation-of-the-holy-grail-photonic-structure
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Chao Wang, Congcong Cui, Quanzheng Deng, Chong Zhang, Shunsuke Asahina, Yuanyuan Cao, Yiyong Mai, Shunai Che, Lu Han
As one of the most stunning biological nanostructures, the single-diamond (SD) surface discovered in beetles and weevils exoskeletons possesses the widest complete photonic bandgap known to date and is renowned as the "holy grail" of photonic materials. However, the synthesis of SD is difficult due to its thermodynamical instability compared to the energetically favoured bicontinuous double diamond and other easily formed lattices; thus, the artificial fabrication of SD has long been a formidable challenge...
April 9, 2024: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38573084/early-evolution-of-anamorphidae-coleoptera-coccinelloidea-the-oldest-known-anamorphid-beetles-from-upper-cretaceous-amber-of-northern-myanmar-and-the-first-report-of-potential-glandular-pores-in-the-family
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emmanuel Arriaga-Varela, Karol Szawaryn, Yu-Lingzi Zhou, Jana Bruthansová, Yan-Da Li, Wioletta Tomaszewska
In order to place newly discovered fossil taxa (Palaeosymbius gen. nov. with P. groehni and P. mesozoicus spp. nov.) from the mid-Cretaceous amber from northern Myanmar, we investigated the relations of extant and extinct lineages of the coccinellid group of Coccinelloidea with emphasis on the family Anamorphidae. We assembled a taxonomic sampling of 34 taxa, including 15 genera and 19 species of Anamorphidae, the most comprehensive sampling of Anamorphidae at the generic level in a phylogenetic analysis. A morphological dataset of 47 characters was built as well as a molecular alignment of 7140 bp including fragments of eight genes (12S, 16S, 18S, 28S, COI, COII, H3 and CAD)...
April 4, 2024: Cladistics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38572766/distinct-communities-under-the-snow-describing-characteristics-of-subnivium-arthropod-communities
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Christopher P Ziadeh, Shayleigh B Ziadeh, Breanne H Aflague, Mark A Townley, Matthew P Ayres, Alexandra R Contosta, Jeff R Garnas
Arthropods are active during the winter in temperate regions. Many use the seasonal snowpack as a buffer against harsh ambient conditions and are active in a refugium known as the subnivium. While the use of the subnivium by arthropods is well established, far less is known about subnivium community composition, abundance, biomass, and diversity and how these characteristics compare with the community in the summer. Understanding subnivium communities is especially important given the observed and anticipated changes in snowpack depth and duration due to the changing climate...
April 4, 2024: Environmental Entomology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38572532/six-complete-mitochondrial-genomes-of-ground-beetles-from-the-harpalinae-and-carabinae-coleoptera-carabidae-with-phylogenetic-analysis-based-on-mitogenomic-data
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Xingyu Lin, Nan Song, Miaomiao Wang
In this study, we employed high-throughput sequencing technology to determine the complete mitochondrial genomes of six ground beetles, encompassing five Harpalinae species and one Carabinae species. The sizes of mitochondrial genomes ranged from 15,334 to 16,972 bp, encompassing 37 genes, including 13 protein-coding genes, 22 transfer RNA genes, and 2 ribosomal RNA genes. Furthermore, each species was found to possess a putative control region. Combining with 65 published mitochondrial genome sequences of Carabidae as ingroups and four species from Trachypachidae, Gyrinidae and Dytiscidae as outgroups, we conducted phylogenetic analyses utilizing Maximum likelihood and Bayesian inference methods...
April 2024: Archives of Insect Biochemistry and Physiology
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