The tiniest of moths

ResearchBlogging.org

The family Nepticulidae hold some of the smallest moths known, ranging from 3-8mm wing-tip to wing-tip. For a comparison I have imaged two moths above: the largest knownCoscinocera hercules that tips the scales at nearly 9 colių, and one of the smallest (yes that tiny little speck below the Hercules moth) – Ectoedemia rubifoliella, also imaged below. The Nepticulidae are surprisingly diverse, su daugiau 800 species described that likely represent only 10% of the actual diversity (Powell, 2009). In the United States we have only 80 rūšis, of which 25 are known from the west. When you compare that diversity to the 100 or so species known from Great Britain, it’s clear that the US knowledge is vastly lacking. Tiesą sakant,, over 80% of all nepticulid diversity is known from Europe alone. A strange inversion when you consider that the neotropics are the world’s most diverse ecosystems yet have only 74 known Nepticulidae species! (Puplesis, 2000). Why is this so?

Ectoedemia rubifoliella 3.3mm

Stigmella ostryaefoliella 3.1mm

The European diversity can easily be explained away due to a high concentration of bored Lepidopterists. The Holarctic fauna is not the most diverse and it therefore has become the best understood on the planet, not to mention they have had a long history of gentleman entomologists dating back hundreds of years. But the rest of the Nepticulidae diversity remains a mystery because they are really, tikrai mažas, hard to spread, and difficult to identify as adults! I have actually had little practice or success with mounting Nepticulidae, and the above specimens should be credited to Dr. Dave'as Wagneris. The very few that I do have in my collection are simply pinned and un-spread; and even the pinning proves hard enough when a slip of the hand can obliterate the entire specimen. Apparently the best method for mounting is to knock them down in the freezer and pin them while they are still alive. Not the most humane, but the only way to keep the moth from drying before your eyes and becoming impossible to manipulate. As hard as the adults are to manage, the larvae are rather characteristic in that most are leaf minersthey feed on the material tarp the leaf epidermises. This lends to the common name ofleaf blotch minersbecause you can see the translucent patches the moths have ‘minedout from inside the leaf. Not only is each species rather host-specific, but they tend to form very characteristic mine patterns within the leaf. So if you find a leaf mine and you know the species of plant, chances are you can find out the species of Nepticulid within it (however not all leaf mines are nepticulids, there are lots of other insects that do this as well). Rearing these moths are also rather simple, all you have to do is pop the leaf in a bag and wait for the moth to finish feeding. One caterpillar only needs one leaf (or tiny section of leaf) – but care has to be taken to keep the leaf green while the caterpillar feeds. If the leaf dies, so will the caterpillar. Because of this paradoxical ability to identify the mines and not the adults there is a surprising amount of ecological research done on them, especially since a few pose threats to commercial crops. The first image below clearly illustrates the caterpillar feeding within the leafand the trail of frass it has left behind.

Stigmella aceris (link to image credit)

Stigmella paradoxa (link to image credit)

If you look at the above images of mines it’s not all that difficult to imagine structures like this fossilizing. And amazingly, they have! The first image below (Labandeira et al., 1994) shows a variety of leaf mining Nepticulidae mines (and a Gracillariidae) from the mid-Cretaceous (97 million years ago). The spectacular thing about leaf mines is that you can get down to genus level and sometimes even species. The authors were able to differentiate between the nepticulid genera Stigas Mella ir Ectoedemia based on the patterns preserved in the fossils; patterns we still use to help separate genera today. The bottom illustration is from a mine discovered in Japan that is only around 8 million years old (Kuroko, 1987).

(Labanderia, 1994)

(Kuroko, 1987)

Nuorodos

Kuroko, H. (1987). A Fossil Leaf Mine of Nepticulidae (Drugiai Lepidoptera) from Japan. Bulletin Sugadaira Montane Res. Cen., No.8, 119-121.

Labandeira, C. (1994). Ninety-Seven Million Years of Angiosperm-Insect Association: Paleobiological Insights into the Meaning of Coevolution Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 91 (25), 12278-12282 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.91.25.12278

PUPLESIS, R., DIŠKUS, A., ROBINSON, G., & ONORE, G. (2002). A review and checklist of the Neotropical Nepticulidae (Drugiai Lepidoptera) Bulletin of The Natural History Museum. Entomology Series, 71 (01) DOI: 10.1017/S0968045402000032

Powell, J.A., Opler, P.A. (2010). Kandys Vakarų Šiaurės Amerikoje – by J. A. Powell and P. A. Opler Systematic Entomology, 35 (2), 347-347 DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-3113.2010.00525.x

A strange armored lobopodian from the Cambrian

ResearchBlogging.org The early Cambrian seas (542-488 million years ago) had a plethora of strange and bizarre creatures almost unimaginable to even the best sci-fi dreamer. As possibly one of the precursors to the Arthropoda (also Onychophora ir Tardigrada), the lobopodian lineages represent a strange group ofworms with legsthat once roamed the ancient sea beds. Exactly how close they are to the true arthropods is up for debate (tree below), but this newly discovered genus and species, Diania cactiformis (walking cactus), represents the most well sclerotized and arthropod-like of any known to date.

This whopping two and a half inch monster helps us understand the transition from a soft bodied worm like creature into a hard-shelled arthropod; it also gives a better impression of how diverse these lobopodian appendages may have been. It’s a fascinating question because the advantage of jointed, sclerotized, limbs was one that exploded and diversified amongst the creatures we know today. Exactly how this happened is not any closer to being resolved, but it appears as if the legs of this animal were sclerotized before the body (arthropodization vs. arthrodization). One small fossil discovered and yet another small insight into evolutionary history.

 

Nuorodos

Liu, J., Steiner, M., Dunlop, J., Keupp, H., Shu, D., Ou, Q., Han, J., Zhang, Z., & Zhang, X. (2011). An armoured Cambrian lobopodian from China with arthropod-like appendages Nature, 470 (7335), 526-530 DOI: 10.1038/nature09704

Further reading: A colleagues blog on the lobopodian in Hungarian.

A Year in Review

Oops, looks like I missed my first ‘blogoversary’! Monday the 21st was the one year turning point for my blog; and I’m incredibly happy to have spent the last year sharing some of my ramblings with all of you. I’ve somewhat lost track of how many hits I’ve had since I moved everything over to The Southern Fried Science Network, but it’s more than I ever could have ever imagined as a newbie blogger twelve months ago. When I look over the last year a few posts come to mind as my favorite:

Adela trigrapha (Moth Tasting in Napa)

Continue reading A Year in Review

The Monarchs Are All Right

Shockingly, stunningly, amazingly; the monarchs are back (but not co-staring Julianne Moore). Gerai, it’s not that amazing; I pretty much predicted this would be the case last March when everyone was running around terrified because the butterflies hit an all time low (since counting started į 1993). Actually I believe I saidI will bet anything on the population making a recovery in the years to come…”. Taip, how about anything = beer, and who’s buying?

Perhaps I am celebrating a bit early. Maybe the news isn’t so good that I can run a victory lap quite yet, but preliminary surveys look like the overwintering populations have doubled this year. That’s a pretty good start, but we still haven’t hit the 18 year average (not an impressive statistic). But don’t misread my intentionsI’m not claiming this one year somehow has proven the decline insignificant. It may or may not be, all we can really say is that it’s just another data point. The fact is that our dataset is very weak and there are factors such as local weather that create massive margins of error. It’s also nearly impossible to extrapolate from what little data we do have. So is the monarch a very goodcanary in the coal mine”?

I would say poor at best. How is one insect species that roosts in massive singular colonies a good indicator of our ecosystem? Taip, they migrate from all reaches of North America, but their recent high mortality rates have nothing to do with the lives they lived outside of Mexico. Perhaps if millions of butterflies died of some strange toxin we could heed the warning, but such was not the case. Those poor monarchs are at the mercy of winter storms that are likely to become more frequent with a warming climate. So can we say that climate change is negatively impacting these animals? Turns out we can’t, at least not yet. If this were to be so then our data is telling us that the 1996-1997 season was a really healthy one where clouds of pollution parted and nature rejoiced. Did the 2010 season then become a post apocalyptic blade-runner-esque world where acid rain melted the orange off of butterfly wings? Clearly not. Neither climate nor pollution were drastically different in those years. The monarchs just had a really good year followed by some really bad ones. Maybe we should just find a better canary if we’re trying to blow the whistle on global warming or deforestation.

As a last thought here is a video from the above story. Just as you’d expect, it’s over dramatized and a bit hilarious.

 

Genius of the Press XVI

A softball for this GOP challenge. This image comes care of the Victoria Advocate (TX paper) – su poorly written article about butterflies. This image flop is pretty easy, but for extra points who can tell me what else is incorrect in the text?

 

New Header

I’ve uploaded a new header as you can seehow does it look? I’m playing around with the settings, but please let me know if the moth on the right gets cropped awkwardly, and what your screen resolution is if that is the case.

Ačiū!

Drugeliai prie alaus

(Credit: David Cappaert, Insectimages.org)

 

If you happen to be living out in Yolo, Solano or Sacramento counties you should head out with a net. dr. Art Shaprio has offered for the 40th year his cabbage white butterfly competition. If you are the very first person to catch a cabbage white (Pieris iš invasive) before Dr. Shapiro he will buy you a pitcher of beer! You have to deliver the specimen alive to the receptionist in the Department of Evolution and Ecology to confirm the identification (I assume to prove you didn’t just save last year’s dead butterfly and cheat).

Over the last 30 years the butterflies have been emerging earliertwo weeks on average now. You better hurry, the first cabbage white of 2010 was collected on January 27th.

Patikrinkite savo horoskopą šiandien?

aš padariau, ir atrodo, kad tai parašė Sarah Palin. Tiesą sakant,, Aš susidūriau su šia metaanalizė 22,000 horoskopai baigiasi Informacija yra graži. Tai įspūdinga – bet čia pateiksiu keletą punktų:

Iš šių 22,000 horoskopai buvo dažniausiai pasitaikančių žodžių lentelė (apačioje), 90% kurios yra visiškai vienodos, nepaisant jūsų ženklo. David McCandless taip pat sukūrė meta prognozę naudodamas šiuos dažniausiai vartojamus žodžius. Tai vyksta maždaug taip.

Paruošta? Žinoma? Kad ir kokia būtų situacija ar slapta akimirka, labai mėgaukitės viskuo. Jaučiasi galintis visiškai rūpintis. Nieko kito nesitikėk. Mylėkis toliau. Svarbu šeima ir draugai. Pasaulis yra gyvenimas, linksmybės ir energijos. Galbūt sunku. Arba lengva. Geriausia vartoti tiksliai pakankamai. Padėkite ir pasikalbėkite su kitais. Pakeiskite savo nuomonę ir ateis geresnė nuotaika…

Visi, tikiuosi, turėtume žinoti, kad horoskopai ir astrologija visada buvo garuojančios krūvos. Matant tokius duomenis, tampa daug lengviau juoktis iš kvailumo. Man taip pat patinka McCandlesso žvaigždės bruožų interpretacija. aš esu a “dvyniai” (ar bent jau buvo), o man dažniausiai pasitaikantys žodžiai yra “vakarėlis, likti, klausimus ir būtinai išklausykite”. Interpretuoja kaip “emociškai sutrikęs vakarėlio gyvūnas, kuris niekada nesako „ne“.”. Mylėk.

Galbūt neseniai girdėjote ir apie skandalinga istorija neteisingų žvaigždžių užduočių. Pasirodo, mūsų žemė šiek tiek svyruoja orbitoje; tai reiškia, kad šiąnakt žvaigždės nėra tiksliai ten, kur jos yra naktiniame danguje, kaip buvo prieš kelis tūkstantmečius, kai pirmą kartą buvo išvestas zodiakas. Taigi, jei žvaigždės formuoja tai, kas tu esi gimus, jos tai daro atsižvelgdamos į tai, kur yra dabar, o ne 2,000 prieš metus. Siurprizas – daug žmonių dabar turėtų būti priskirti naujam ženklui! Ooooh skandalas! Astrologijos mokslas to net nepriartėjo nuspėti (man labai skaudėjo net pašaipiai vadinti astrologiją mokslu). Bet tai gerai, tai jiems netrukdys, jie puikiai prisitaiko vengti sunkaus mokslo ir sukti BS, ir tai daro šimtus metų. Atgal 1781 astronomai sviedė veržliaraktį į astrologų galvas atradę Uraną – ir po kartos Neptūnas pasirodė scenoje. Oi nesijaudink! Astrologai iškraipė savo skaičius, verkšleno apie skirtingus “diagramas ir sistemas” ir įsiskverbė į du papildomus žvaigždžių ženklus, kad susitartų su pasauliu, kaip jį suprato mokslas. Oi, ir negalvok apie likusį milijardą, milijardas žvaigždžių ir planetų…

Dar, Čia, Berklyje, gatvėje vis dar girdžiu silpną verksmą – kažkas trenkia ranka į galvą ir sušunka “oi dabar tai prasminga, Aš buvau Jautis visi kartu!”

Turėtumėte apsilankyti jo tinklaraštyje ir atidžiau pažvelgti į analizę. Dar geriau, jei turite draugą, kuriam patinka jų astrologija, turėtumėte tai nukreipti jų kryptimi.

 

 

 

Entomofagija: kandys vakarienei

Šis įrašas buvo pasirinktas kaip ResearchBlogging.org redaktoriaus pasirinkimas Visada tai žinojau daugelyje pasaulio vietų, ypač ne iš vėžių, valgiaraštyje yra kandžių ir drugelių vikšrai. Iš Afrika į Australija yra dešimtys rūšių, kurių skonis gali būti pakankamai geras, kad būtų pakankamai valgomas ar net skanus. Tačiau čia, JAV, ant mūsų stalų vabzdžiai patenka retai (bent jau mūsų žiniomis) – bet retkarčiais į mūsų butelius. Esu tikras, kad daugelis iš jūsų matė kirminą tekilos butelio apačioje: kuri iš tikrųjų yra kosidų drugio vikšras Hypotpa agavis. Net girdėjau pranešimų, kad migrantai meksikiečiai per pietų pertrauką iškasa vietinius augalus, kad užkąstų didelėmis rožinėmis giminingos kandis lervomis.; tikriausiai gentyje Komedija. Nepaisant mano ankstesnių žinių, Mane šiek tiek nustebino neseniai paskelbtas straipsnis, kuriame aptariama didžiulė Lepidoptera įvairovė, naudojama kaip pagrindinis maisto šaltinis visoje Meksikoje..

(iš Wikipedia)

Continue reading Entomophagy: kandys vakarienei

Spaudos genijus XV

Už šį spaudos genijaus numerį, who can tell me what’s wrong with Šis straipsnis? Tai gana subtilu, bet aiški klaida, ypač LiveScience.