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Chemical signals mimicry

Judging from the paucity of references about non-social insects, it is tempting to think that chemical deception/mimicry did not play a major role in their evolution. However there have been too few studies done to draw any definite conclusion, since there are several reports presenting evidence of mimicry in non-social arthropods. Also, another type of mimicry can occur when species such as orthoptera, particularly good in exploiting acoustic signals,... [Pg.285]

Most of the present book is dedicated to one class of Arthropoda, the Insecta, because chemical communication research in this class is the most complete and broadly illustrated. This type of research on the chelicerate arthropods of the class Arachnida is, by contrast, poorly developed. We saw for example in Chapter 7, studies of chemical ecology interactions with Acari and particularly mite-insect interactions, and a few examples of chemical interaction with spiders were also shown in the same chapter on chemical mimicry, even though spiders are the most familiar and numerous of the arachnids. We undertook some work and about 15-10 years ago on contact chemical signal description and its relationship with behavior, physiology and reproduction, in different types of Aranea (spiders). We will present here a distillation of this work with a review of studies on the subject by different authors. Most notable here is the poverty of research on contact recognition signals and relative behavioral works on the order Scorpionida, the scorpions. Some of the few chemical data available are published here for the first time. [Pg.344]

The predators discussed up to this point search for prey by using their ability to perceive certain chemical clues. Some unusual predators have evolved the ability to attract their prey with scents that mimic the odor of a valuable resource (see reviews of chemical mimicry in refs. 9 and 39). Several groups of spiders lure male insect prey with scents that mimic the sex pheromone scents of females of the prey species (see reviews in refs. 9,13,40, and 41). To the best of our knowledge, these spiders are the only predators that mimic sex pheromones. However, the spiders share some similarities with the diverse orchids which mimic insect sex pheromones to lure pollinators (9, 42, 43) and with the predatory fireflies, which practice elaborate mimicry of visual sexual signals to lure their prey heterospecific male fireflies (44). [Pg.69]


See other pages where Chemical signals mimicry is mentioned: [Pg.640]    [Pg.282]    [Pg.282]    [Pg.1]    [Pg.507]    [Pg.153]    [Pg.294]    [Pg.632]    [Pg.309]    [Pg.204]    [Pg.498]    [Pg.1002]    [Pg.314]    [Pg.906]    [Pg.76]    [Pg.9]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.4 ]




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