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Under
Embargo Till: 23:01 UTC Tuesday 10, 2007
Posted 23:01
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Aphids
Make 'chemical Weapons' To Fight Off Killer Ladybugs
Tuesday, July 10, 2007
Top
Image
Ladybugs
enjoy the treat of aphids
Bottom
Image
Till
it come to the Cabbage aphids
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Cabbage aphids have
developed an internal chemical defense system which enables them
to disable attacking predators by setting off a mustard oil
'bomb', says new research published today.
The study shows for the first
time how aphids use a chemical found in the plants they eat to
emit a deadly burst of mustard oil when they're attacked by a
predator, for example a ladybug. This mustard oil kills, injures
or repels the ladybird, which then saves the colony of aphids
from attack, although the individual aphid involved usually dies
in the process.
When the aphids feed on
cabbages, they consume chemicals called glucosinolates which are
found in the nutrient transport vessels of the plant. Once eaten,
these chemicals are then stored in the aphids' blood. Mimicking
the plants themselves, the aphids also produce an enzyme called
myrosinase, which is stored in the muscles of their head and
thorax. In the event of a predator attack this enzyme in the
muscles comes into contact with the glucosinolates in the blood,
catalyzing a violent chemical reaction which releases mustard
oil.
The research team from the UK
and Norway confirmed their findings by controlling the diet of
different groups of aphids. They found that those insects eating
a diet rich in glucosinolates had a high success rate in fending
off predators, whereas those without glucosinolates in their diet
did not. Scientists already knew that aphids absorbed these
chemicals from their food, but this study published Proceedings
of the Royal Society B is the first of its kind to prove that
they form the basis of a chemical defense system.
The scientists also found that
the extent to which glucosinolates are stored up by the aphids
from birth into adulthood depends on whether or not they develop
wings. Those aphids that grow wings see a rapid decline in the
amount of glucosinolates they store from the time wing buds start
to develop.
Dr Glen Powell from Imperial
College London's Division of Biology, one of the paper's authors,
explains: "Our study seems to show that aphids that develop
wings cease to store this chemical in their blood as they mature,
as they don't need the 'mustard oil bomb' to defend themselves
from predators when they can just fly away. This is a great
example of the way in which a species provides an ingenious
method of protecting itself, whatever the circumstances."
Dr Powell adds: "In the
wild, aphids live in clonal colonies, with often many hundreds of
individuals crowded together on a plant, and using this poisonous
mustard oil defense provides wingless individuals with a powerful
means of dispelling a predator which poses a risk to the entire
colony. Unfortunately the nature of the mechanism - with the
chemical stored in the insect's blood and the catalyst stored in
its muscles - means that in most cases the individual aphid
responsible for seeing-off the ladybird predator dies in the
process of protecting the colony."
Source:
Imperial College London

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