نتایج جستجو برای: valley of butterflies

تعداد نتایج: 21168178  

2013
Rafi Kent Oded Levanoni Eran Banker Guy Pe’er Salit Kark

Mountains provide an opportunity to examine changes in biodiversity across environmental gradients and areas of transition (ecotones). Mountain ecotones separate vegetation belts. Here, we aimed to examine whether transition areas for birds and butterflies spatially correspond with ecotones between three previously described altitudinal vegetation belts on Mt. Hermon, northern Israel. These inc...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2008
Marcus R Kronforst Lawrence E Gilbert

Theory predicts strong stabilizing selection on warning patterns within species and convergent evolution among species in Müllerian mimicry systems yet Heliconius butterflies exhibit extreme wing pattern diversity. One potential explanation for the evolution of this diversity is that genetic drift occasionally allows novel warning patterns to reach the frequency threshold at which they gain pro...

2016
Denise D. Dell'Aglio María E. Losada Chris D. Jiggins

Visual cues are important for insects to find flowers and host plants. It has been proposed that the diversity of leaf shape in Passiflora vines could be a result of negative frequency dependent selection driven by visual searching behavior among their butterfly herbivores. Here we tested the hypothesis thatHeliconius butterflies use leaf shape as a cue to initiate approach toward a host plant....

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2008
Nina E Fatouros Colette Broekgaarden Gabriella Bukovinszkine'Kiss Joop J A van Loon Roland Mumm Martinus E Huigens Marcel Dicke Monika Hilker

Plants can recruit parasitic wasps in response to egg deposition by herbivorous insects-a sophisticated indirect plant defense mechanism. Oviposition by the Large Cabbage White butterfly Pieris brassicae on Brussels sprout plants induces phytochemical changes that arrest the egg parasitoid Trichogramma brassicae. Here, we report the identification of an elicitor of such an oviposition-induced p...

Journal: :Ecology 2006
L Conradt T J Roper

We observed meadow brown (Maniola jurtina) and gatekeeper (Pyronia tithonus) butterflies at habitat boundaries and observed spontaneous movements out of suitable habitat in order to investigate such movements in relation to dispersal. We found that butterflies of both species were aware of the position of a highly permeable habitat boundary without needing to cross it. Nevertheless, a considera...

2014
Panu Somervuo Jouni Kvist Suvi Ikonen Petri Auvinen Lars Paulin Patrik Koskinen Liisa Holm Minna Taipale Anne Duplouy Annukka Ruokolainen Suvi Saarnio Jukka Sirén Jukka Kohonen Jukka Corander Mikko J. Frilander Virpi Ahola Ilkka Hanski

We characterize allelic and gene expression variation between populations of the Glanville fritillary butterfly (Melitaea cinxia) from two fragmented and two continuous landscapes in northern Europe. The populations exhibit significant differences in their life history traits, e.g. butterflies from fragmented landscapes have higher flight metabolic rate and dispersal rate in the field, and high...

Journal: :Current Biology 2005
Nigel Williams

For many conservationists, butterflies are some of the key species that can indicate the quality of an environment not only for themselves but for many other, often less visible, species. Some of their specific needs are often well known, but movements around their habitat and important factors within it are less understood. To help address this issue, a new study reports for the first time the...

2015
Anniina L K Mattila

Knowledge of the effects of thermal conditions on animal movement and dispersal is necessary for a mechanistic understanding of the consequences of climate change and habitat fragmentation. In particular, the flight of ectothermic insects such as small butterflies is greatly influenced by ambient temperature. Here, variation in body temperature during flight is investigated in an ecological mod...

2012
Víctor Sarto i Monteys Patricia Acín Glòria Rosell Carmen Quero Miquel A. Jiménez Angel Guerrero

BACKGROUND In the course of evolution butterflies and moths developed two different reproductive behaviors. Whereas butterflies rely on visual stimuli for mate location, moths use the 'female calling plus male seduction' system, in which females release long-range sex pheromones to attract conspecific males. There are few exceptions from this pattern but in all cases known female moths possess ...

Journal: :Current Biology 2000
J. E. Yack J. H. Fullard

For nocturnal insects, predation by bats can turn a moonlight flight into a nightmare. Moths have a way of avoiding bats, however, in the form of ultrasonic hearing. Because they have 'tympanal' ears, they can hear the echolocation calls of incoming bats and take evasive action. Butterflies, which are mainly diurnal, have not been known to have ultrasonic hearing. But these images from an unusu...

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