Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Tiny insects against the weather—flight and foraging patterns of Frankliniella schultzei (Thripidae) not altered by onset of rainfall

View through CrossRef
AbstractTo survive in nature, organisms may need to take direct action to mitigate specific dangers from their environmental surroundings. Tiny flying insects are thought to be at particular risk from rainfall that would be of negligible concern to larger animals. The study species Frankliniella schultzei is a thrips that inhabits flowers and feeds mostly on petal tissue and pollen. While found to respond in the laboratory to decreases in atmospheric pressure associated with cyclonic conditions (rather than merely heavy rainfall), their responses to conditions preceding rainfall have not been tested in the field. Initial field sampling investigated the relationship between floral development and sites at which male, female, and larval thrips were generally present on sunny days. We then designed a sampling strategy to test if these thrips can anticipate imminent rainfall or storms and so seek shelter deep within flowers, by sampling host flowers (in sections) on multiple days with different weather conditions. Sticky traps were used to intercept thrips in flight, thus providing a measure of flight behavior across different days. The initial sampling found adult thrips primarily at the petal apex of anthesis‐stage flowers where pollen is distributed. We subsequently found that rainfall, atmospheric pressure change, temperature, humidity and wind had no effect on flight behavior of F. schultzei, or on their positions within flowers. These findings suggest rainfall is not a serious hazard for them. Perhaps thrips can survive raindrop collisions during flight, as impacts with water droplets are not expected to break the surface tension.
Title: Tiny insects against the weather—flight and foraging patterns of Frankliniella schultzei (Thripidae) not altered by onset of rainfall
Description:
AbstractTo survive in nature, organisms may need to take direct action to mitigate specific dangers from their environmental surroundings.
Tiny flying insects are thought to be at particular risk from rainfall that would be of negligible concern to larger animals.
The study species Frankliniella schultzei is a thrips that inhabits flowers and feeds mostly on petal tissue and pollen.
While found to respond in the laboratory to decreases in atmospheric pressure associated with cyclonic conditions (rather than merely heavy rainfall), their responses to conditions preceding rainfall have not been tested in the field.
Initial field sampling investigated the relationship between floral development and sites at which male, female, and larval thrips were generally present on sunny days.
We then designed a sampling strategy to test if these thrips can anticipate imminent rainfall or storms and so seek shelter deep within flowers, by sampling host flowers (in sections) on multiple days with different weather conditions.
Sticky traps were used to intercept thrips in flight, thus providing a measure of flight behavior across different days.
The initial sampling found adult thrips primarily at the petal apex of anthesis‐stage flowers where pollen is distributed.
We subsequently found that rainfall, atmospheric pressure change, temperature, humidity and wind had no effect on flight behavior of F.
schultzei, or on their positions within flowers.
These findings suggest rainfall is not a serious hazard for them.
Perhaps thrips can survive raindrop collisions during flight, as impacts with water droplets are not expected to break the surface tension.

Related Results

Regularity of rainfall timing across Ethiopia: implications for crop production
Regularity of rainfall timing across Ethiopia: implications for crop production
<p>Rainfall timing is a key parameter that farmers rely on to match the cropping season with the time window over which seasonal precipitation provides adequate soil ...
The development of foraging organization
The development of foraging organization
In foraging tasks multiple targets must be found within a single display. The targets can be of one or more types, typically surrounded by numerous distractors. Visual attention ha...
Interannual variation in foraging decisions in chick-rearing black-legged kittiwakes
Interannual variation in foraging decisions in chick-rearing black-legged kittiwakes
Abstract Long-lived species must balance allocation between reproduction and self-maintenance, and such a trade-off is expected to affect their foraging behavior. A ...
Flight Reservation System
Flight Reservation System
Flight reservation System is a computerized system used to store and retrieve information and conduct transactions related to air travel. The project is aimed at exposing the relev...
Avian Responses to Novel Landscapes in Aotearoa
Avian Responses to Novel Landscapes in Aotearoa
<p><strong>The alteration of natural landscapes for human use creates a mosaic of different habitats, varied in how much they have been modified from a natural baseline...
Influence of Cumulative Rainfall on the Occurrence of Landslides in Korea
Influence of Cumulative Rainfall on the Occurrence of Landslides in Korea
This study presents the impact of cumulative rainfall on landslides, following the analysis of cumulative rainfall for 20 days before the landslide. For the 1520 landslides analyze...
New flight trajectory optimisation method using genetic algorithms
New flight trajectory optimisation method using genetic algorithms
AbstractThis paper presents a new flight trajectory optimisation method, based on genetic algorithms, where the selected optimisation criterion is the minimisation of the total cos...
Development of a Deep Learning&#8211;Based Rainfall Prediction System for Urban-Scale Hydrological Disaster Response
Development of a Deep Learning&#8211;Based Rainfall Prediction System for Urban-Scale Hydrological Disaster Response
Over the past 50 years (1973&#8211;2022), South Korea has experienced a modest increase in average precipitation. Notably, the maximum hourly rainfall has significantly risen (...

Back to Top