18 results on '"Petrocelli, Iacopo"'
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2. Effect of climate on strategies of nest and body temperature regulation in paper wasps, Polistes biglumis and Polistes gallicus
- Author
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Stabentheiner, Anton, Nagy, Julia Magdalena, Kovac, Helmut, Käfer, Helmut, Petrocelli, Iacopo, and Turillazzi, Stefano
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- 2022
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3. Increased immunocompetence and network centrality of allogroomer workers suggest a link between individual and social immunity in honeybees
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Cini, Alessandro, Bordoni, Adele, Cappa, Federico, Petrocelli, Iacopo, Pitzalis, Martina, Iovinella, Immacolata, Dani, Francesca Romana, Turillazzi, Stefano, and Cervo, Rita
- Published
- 2020
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4. The Impact of Climate on the Energetics of Overwintering Paper Wasp Gynes (Polistes dominula and Polistes gallicus).
- Author
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Kovac, Helmut, Käfer, Helmut, Petrocelli, Iacopo, Amstrup, Astrid B., and Stabentheiner, Anton
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WINTER ,WASPS ,LOW temperatures ,ACCLIMATIZATION ,WEATHER ,GLOBAL warming ,CLIMATE change - Abstract
Simple Summary: During overwintering diapause, the gynes of paper wasps (Polistes sp.) are mainly dormant in sheltered hibernacles, protecting them against predators and adverse weather conditions but hardly against low temperatures. By measuring the temperature inside hibernacles occupied by species from both Mediterranean (Italian; P. dominula, P. gallicus) and temperate (Austrian; P. dominula) climates (mean hibernacle temperatures: 8.5 °C and 3.2 °C, respectively), we were able to calculate the energetic demand of overwintering. The cumulative energetic costs differed between the populations. Costs were lowest for the P. dominula population from the cooler Austrian winter climate and significantly higher in P. dominula and P. gallicus from the warmer Italian climate. The lower costs of the temperate species were a result of the lower winter temperature and physiological acclimation processes. Energetic calculations with an assumed temperature increase of up to 3 °C due to climate change predict a dramatic increase of up to 40% in overwintering costs in all species. Gynes of paper wasps (Polistes sp.) spend the cold season in sheltered hibernacles. These hibernacles protect against predators and adverse weather conditions but offer only limited protection against low temperatures. During overwintering diapause, wasps live on the energy they store. We investigated the hibernacles' microclimate conditions of species from the Mediterranean (Italy, P. dominula, P. gallicus) and temperate (Austria, P. dominula) climates in order to describe the environmental conditions and calculate the energetic demand of overwintering according to standard metabolic rate functions. The temperatures at the hibernacles differed significantly between the Mediterranean and temperate habitats (average in Austria: 3.2 ± 5.71 °C, in Italy: 8.5 ± 5.29 °C). In both habitats, the hibernacle temperatures showed variance, but the mean hibernacle temperature corresponded closely to the meteorological climate data. Cumulative mass-specific energetic costs over the studied period were the lowest for the temperate P. dominula population compared with both Mediterranean species. The lower costs of the temperate species were a result of the lower hibernacle temperature and acclimation to lower environmental temperatures. Model calculations with an increased mean temperature of up to 3 °C due to climate change indicate a dramatic increase of up to 40% in additional costs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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5. Natural biocide disrupts nestmate recognition in honeybees
- Author
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Cappa, Federico, Petrocelli, Iacopo, Dani, Francesca Romana, Dapporto, Leonardo, Giovannini, Michele, Silva-Castellari, Jeferson, Turillazzi, Stefano, and Cervo, Rita
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- 2019
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6. Comparison of thermal traits of Polistes dominula and Polistes gallicus, two European paper wasps with strongly differing distribution ranges
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Kovac, Helmut, Käfer, Helmut, Petrocelli, Iacopo, and Stabentheiner, Anton
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- 2017
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7. Energetics of Paper Wasps (Polistes sp.) from Differing Climates during the Breeding Season.
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Kovac, Helmut, Käfer, Helmut, Petrocelli, Iacopo, Amstrup, Astrid B., and Stabentheiner, Anton
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NESTS ,WASPS ,WINTER ,BODY temperature regulation ,COLD-blooded animals - Abstract
The metabolism of ectotherms is temperature-dependent, and the exponential nature of the metabolic rate- temperature relationship means that warmer temperatures are disproportionately affecting the energy balance. T SB a sb (standard met.) temperature deviation from microclimate ambient nest temperature was -3.6 °C in I P. dominula i , -2.4 °C in I P. gallicus i , and -3.3 °C in I P. biglumis i ). The energetic calculations were conducted using temperature-dependent metabolic rate models of the three I Polistes i species, I P. dominula i , I P. gallicus i and I P. biglumis i [[17], [29]], and adequate body temperature models [[4], [17]]. The nest ambient air temperatures in the three habitats were clearly elevated above the meteorological standard ambient temperature recorded by the nearest weather stations (temperature difference, I P. dominula i : 3.6 °C, I P. gallicus i : 2.4 °C, I P. biglumis i : 3.3 °C; Figure 2). [Extracted from the article]
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- 2022
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8. Incipient morphological castes in Polistes gallicus (Vespidae, Hymenoptera)
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Dapporto, Leonardo, Petrocelli, Iacopo, and Turillazzi, Stefano
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- 2011
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9. The respiratory metabolism of overwintering paper wasp gynes (Polistes dominula and Polistes gallicus).
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Kovac, Helmut, Käfer, Helmut, Petrocelli, Iacopo, and Stabentheiner, Anton
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MEDITERRANEAN climate ,WASPS ,TEMPERATE climate ,METABOLISM ,ENERGY conservation ,WINTER - Abstract
Winter in climatic regions with low temperatures is a challenge for overwintering insects. They are exposed to temperature extremes, which directly cause mortality or lead to energy depletion. The winter hibernaculum of paper wasp gynes protects from predators and rain, but only poorly from ambient temperature. In order to detect physiological adaptations to differing climates, we compared the respiratory metabolism of overwintering gynes of two polistine species from the Mediterranean climate in Italy (Polistes dominula and Polistes gallicus), and of one species from the temperate climate in Austria (Polistes dominula). The wasps' CO2 emission was measured with stop‐flow respirometry in a temperature range from 2.5 to 20 °C. The mass‐specific standard (resting) metabolic rate, the main type of metabolism of the dormant insects during overwintering, increased exponentially with ambient temperature but was suppressed in comparison to individuals measured in the summer, which conserves the energy stores. In addition, it was lower in the Mediterranean species (P. dominula and P. gallicus) in comparison to the temperate species (P. dominula), especially at higher temperatures. The active metabolic rate was suppressed to a similar amount. The suppressed metabolism of the overwintering Mediterranean gynes could be an adaptation to the higher winter temperatures to prevent a premature depletion of the energy resources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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10. Immunity of honeybee guards reflects their transition from house bees to foragers.
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Cappa, Federico, Petrocelli, Iacopo, Cini, Alessandro, Pepiciello, Irene, Giovannini, Michele, Lazzeri, AnnaMarta, Perito, Brunella, Turillazzi, Stefano, and Cervo, Rita
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BEEHIVES , *INSECT societies , *HONEYBEES , *IMMUNITY , *GRAM-negative bacteria , *DIVISION of labor - Abstract
Eusocial insect colonies represent some of the most extreme examples of specialized division of labor. Ageing in workers is often associated with a temporal polyethism in the tasks performed both inside and outside the colony. Such behavioral transition is sometimes linked to a gradual reduction in individual immunity. Here, we studied the immune ability of Apis mellifera guard bees, which represent an intermediate stage between house bees working inside the nest and foragers collecting resources outside, to assess if their specific task is associated with an immune specialization. Through immune challenge with Gram-negative bacteria Escherichia coli, we compared the guards ability to clear bacterial cells from their haemolymph with respect to house bees and foragers. Our findings demonstrate that guards do not show an immune specialization linked to their task but seem to represent a transition also in terms of immunity, since their anti-bacterial response appears intermediate between house bees and foragers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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11. Female body size, weight and fat storage rather than nestmateship determine male attraction in the invasive yellow-legged hornet Vespa velutina nigrithorax.
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Cappa, Federico, Cini, Alessandro, Pepiciello, Irene, Petrocelli, Iacopo, and Cervo, Rita
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HORNETS ,INSECT behavior ,INSECT adaptation ,INSECT breeding ,INTRODUCED species - Abstract
In the early stage of the invasion process, alien species may face costs linked to pioneer effect due to genetic bottleneck, drift and the consequential inbreeding depression. Thus, introduced species that show an immediate exponential growth in their invasive population should have some mechanisms to reduce such costs minimising the chance of inbreeding or allowing them to cope with them. The yellow-legged hornet Vespa velutina nigrithorax has been spotted in France in 2004; since then, the species has been invading Europe with a relentless pace. In their native range, males and reproductive females of a Chinese non-invasive sub-species of V. velutina seem to leave their nests to search for unrelated partners. However, previous studies showed a low genetic diversity and a high rate of diploid males in colonies of the invasive population, suggesting that mating could occur inside nests, where males should be able to discriminate between reproductive gynes and sterile workers. Here, we used laboratory behavioural assays to investigate the mating preferences of yellow-legged hornet males from the recent invasive population in Italy. We assessed the importance of nestmateship and female morpho-physiological traits, likely indicators of caste, in determining male attraction towards potential partners. Our results demonstrate that males are more attracted to bigger females with more abundant fat storage, good indicators of female reproductive caste in wasps, regardless of nestmateship. Our findings represent a first step in understanding the reproductive biology of V. velutina nigrithorax in its invasive range, providing a framework for future research in the field to prevent or reduce the species expansion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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12. Antennal Protein Profile in Honeybees: Caste and Task Matter More Than Age.
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Iovinella, Immacolata, Cappa, Federico, Cini, Alessandro, Petrocelli, Iacopo, Cervo, Rita, Turillazzi, Stefano, and Dani, Francesca R.
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BIOCHEMISTRY ,NEURAL transmission ,PATHOGENIC microorganisms ,LIFE sciences ,BIOMOLECULES - Abstract
Reproductive and task partitioning in large colonies of social insects suggest that colony members belonging to different castes or performing different tasks during their life (polyethism) may produce specific semiochemicals and be differently sensitive to the variety of pheromones involved in intraspecific chemical communication. The main peripheral olfactory organs are the antennal chemosensilla, where the early olfactory processes take place. At this stage, members of two different families of soluble chemosensory proteins [odorant-binding proteins (OBPs) and chemosensory proteins (CSPs)] show a remarkable affinity for different odorants and act as carriers while a further family, the Niemann-Pick type C2 proteins (NPC2) may have a similar function, although this has not been fully demonstrated. Sensillar lymph also contains Odorant degrading enzymes (ODEs) which are involved in inactivation through degradation of the chemical signals, once the message is conveyed. Despite their importance in chemical communication, little is known about how proteins involved in peripheral olfaction and, more generally antennal proteins, differ in honeybees of different caste, task and age. Here, we investigate for the first time, using a shotgun proteomic approach, the antennal profile of honeybees of different castes (queens and workers) and workers performing different tasks (nurses, guards, and foragers) by controlling for the potential confounding effect of age. Regarding olfactory proteins, major differences were observed between queens and workers, some of which were found to be more abundant in queens (OBP3, OBP18, and NPC2-1) and others to be more abundant in workers (OBP15, OBP21, CSP1, and CSP3); while between workers performing different tasks, OBP14 was more abundant in nurses with respect to guards and foragers. Apart from proteins involved in olfaction, we have found that the antennal proteomes are mainly characterized by castes and tasks, while age has no effect on antennal protein profile. Among the main differences, the strong decrease in vitellogenins found in guards and foragers is not associated with age. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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13. Ontogenic Caste Differences in the Van der Vecht Organ of Primitively Eusocial Neotropical Paper Wasps.
- Author
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de Souza, André Rodrigues, Petrocelli, Iacopo, Lino-Neto, José, Santos, Eduardo Fernando, Noll, Fernando Barbosa, and Turillazzi, Stefano
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PAPER wasps , *DIMORPHISM in animals , *INSECT morphology , *QUEENS (Insects) , *CLASSIFICATION of insects , *INSECTS , *ONTOGENY - Abstract
Recent studies have reported incipient morphological caste dimorphism in the Van der Vecht organ size of some temperate Polistes paper wasps. Whether species other than the temperate ones show a similar pattern remains elusive. Here, we have studied some Neotropical Polistes species. By comparing females collected through the year, we showed caste related differences in the size of the Van der Vecht organ in P. ferreri (body size corrected Van der Vech organ size of queens = 0.45 ± 0.06, workers = 0.38 ± 0.07 mm2, p = 0.0021), P. versicolor (body size corrected Van der Vech organ size of queens = 0.54 ± 0.11, workers = 0.46 ± 0.09 mm2, p = 0.010), but not P. simillimus (body size corrected Van der Vech organ size of queens = 0.52 ± 0.05, workers = 0.49 ± 0.06 mm2, p = 0.238). Therefore, it seems that queens and workers of some Neotropical Polistes have diverged in their ontogenic trajectory of the Van der Vecht organ size, providing clear evidence for incipient morphological caste dimorphism. As Polistes are distributed mostly in the tropics, we propose that physical caste differences may be widespread in the genus. Also, we highlight that morphological divergence in the queen–worker phenotypes may have started through differential selection of body structures, like the Van der Vecht organ. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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14. Visual Signals of Individual Quality in a European Solitary Founding Paper Wasp.
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Petrocelli, Iacopo, Ricciardi, Giulia, Rodrigues de Souza, André, Ermanni, Andrea, Ninu, Andrea, Turillazzi, Stefano, and Herberstein, M.
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VISUALIZATION , *CELLULAR signal transduction , *PAPER wasps , *EXTERNALITIES , *POLISTES - Abstract
Conventional signals are maintained via social costs and commonly used in the animal kingdom to assess conspecifics' agonistic ability during disputes over resources. In the last decade, some experimental studies reported the existence of visual conventional signals in several social wasp species, being good rank predictors in different social contexts. Females of the social wasp Polistes gallicus do not cooperate to start nests but they often try to usurp conspecific nests. Here, we showed that the reproductive females of this species have variable facial colour patterns that function as conventional signals. Wasps with larger black spots on their clypeus are more likely to successfully overwinter, are larger, and are better at fighting and at holding a nest. Furthermore, in field experiments, resident foundresses rely on facial pattern to assess usurpers' fighting abilities, modulating their defence reaction accordingly, so that rivals with larger black spot receive more aggression than rivals with smaller or no black spots on the clypeus. Our study reveals that visual recognition abilities are widespread among paper wasps that, regardless of their social biology, face similar selective pressures within competitive contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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15. The venom apparatus in stenogastrine wasps: Subcellular features of the convoluted gland.
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Petrocelli, Iacopo, Turillazzi, Stefano, and Delfino, Giovanni
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WASPS , *INSECT venom , *TRANSMISSION electron microscopy , *ULTRASTRUCTURE (Biology) , *CELL compartmentation , *COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
In the wasp venom apparatus, the convoluted gland is the tract of the thin secretory unit, i.e. filament, contained in the muscular reservoir. Previous transmission electron microscope investigation on Stenogastrinae disclosed that the free filaments consist of distal and proximal tracts, from/to the venom reservoir, characterized by class 3 and 2 gland patterns, respectively. This study aims to extend the ultrastructural analysis to the convoluted tract, in order to provide a thorough, subcellular representation of the venom gland in these Asian wasps. Our findings showed that the convoluted gland is a continuation of the proximal tract, with secretory cells provided with a peculiar apical invagination, the extracellular cavity, collecting their products. This compartment holds a simple end-apparatus lined by large and ramified microvilli that contribute to the processing of the secretory product. A comparison between previous and present findings reveals a noticeable regionalization of the stenogastrine venom filaments and suggests that the secretory product acquires its ultimate composition in the convoluted tract. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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16. The morphology of Van der Vecth's organ as a tool to measure caste dimorphism in Polistes paper wasps: a comparative approach.
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Petrocelli, Iacopo and Turillazzi, Stefano
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CENTRALITY , *INSECT societies , *PHEROMONES , *PHENOTYPES , *POLISTES - Abstract
Given the centrality of chemical communication in social insects, there are many selective pressures acting on morpho-functional traits that mediate chemical pheromones. On the last gastral sternite of Polistes females, there is an important exocrine surface secreting chemical pheromone, named Van der Vecht's organ. It is involved in chemical defence of the nest, in rank and nestmate recognition, preventing workers from direct reproduction. Allometric differential growth of phenotypic traits between castes of social insects is generally considered as an indication of incipient physical castes. European Polistes present different nesting strategies and reproductive choices. Here, we carry out a comparison of Van der Vecht's organ size between castes of four European Polistes to provide a general measure of dimorphism. We show that Van der Vecht's organ of Polistes dominula and Polistes nimphus foundresses shows an allometric development being enlarged with respect to workers. Otherwise, no allometries have been highlighted in the other two studied species (i.e. Polistes associus and Polistes biglumis). Therefore, our data show that neither rigid monogyny nor specific nesting habits foster the evolution of true morphological castes in primitively eusocial taxa. Thus, at least two other species of Ezuropean Polistes show real evidence of incipient morphological castes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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17. Comparative morphology of Van der Vecht's organ in Polistes social parasites: host ecology and adaptation of the parasite.
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Petrocelli, Iacopo and Turillazzi, Stefano
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COMPARATIVE anatomy , *POLISTES , *SOCIAL parasites , *BIOLOGICAL adaptation , *CAMOUFLAGE (Biology) , *MIMICRY (Biology) , *ECOLOGICAL research - Abstract
Camouflage strategies are common in insect social parasites. Being accepted into an alien colony as a dominant nestmate favours behavioural and morphological adaptations to mimic a specific odour. In Polistes social parasites, abdominal tegumental glands are involved in this camouflage strategy. These glands secreting cuticular hydrocarbons are connected with a modified cuticular area of the last gastral sternite of female wasps, named Van der Vecht's organ, whose secretion is involved in rank and dominance recognition. The size of this exocrine area has been demonstrated to be under selective pressure in Polistes, as a response to an efficient dominance recognition. Because chemical and behavioural integration differs between parasitic species, we carried out a comparison of Van der Vecht's organ size between the three Polistes social parasites and their respective hosts. The parasites Polistes sulcifer and Polistes semenowi, capable of a rapid chemical mimicry and specialized to exploit a lowland host, also show an enlarged Van der Vecht's organ. Conversely, the parasite Polistes atrimandibularis, specialized on a mountain species and showing a slow chemical integration, has a smaller organ. The time available for the parasite to tune up its chemical mimicry, before the emergence of workers to be accepted as a dominant nestmate, appears to be the most important selective pressure acting on the size of this abdominal organ. © 2013 The Linnean Society of London [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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18. Relation between activity, endothermic performance and respiratory metabolism in two paper wasps: Polistes dominula and Polistes gallicus.
- Author
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Kovac, Helmut, Kundegraber, Bettina, Käfer, Helmut, Petrocelli, Iacopo, and Stabentheiner, Anton
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BODY temperature , *WASPS , *PHYSIOLOGICAL adaptation , *MEDICAL thermometry , *COLD adaptation , *METABOLISM - Abstract
Climate change is expected to produce shifts in species distributions as well as behavioural and physiological adaptations to find suitable conditions or to cope with the altered environment. The paper wasps Polistes dominula and Polistes gallicus are closely related species, native in the European Mediterranean region and North Africa. P. dominula has expanded its range to the relatively cooler climates of Northern and Eastern Europe, but P. gallicus remained in its original distribution area. In order to reveal their metabolic adaptation to the current climate conditions, and the impact on energy demand at future climate conditions, we investigated the respiratory metabolic rate (CO 2 production) of P. dominula from Austria and P. gallicus from Italy. In contrast to the metabolic cold adaptation hypothesis their standard metabolic rate was nearly the same and increased in a typical exponential course with increasing ambient temperature. The metabolic rate of active wasps was higher than the standard metabolic rate and increased with the wasps' activity. There was no obvious difference in the active metabolism between the two species, with the exception that some P. gallicus individuals showed some extraordinary high values. A simultaneous measurement of metabolic rate and body temperature revealed that increased CO 2 production was accompanied by endothermic activity. The two investigated populations of paper wasps are quite similar in their metabolic response to temperature, although they live in different climate regions. The spread of P. dominula into cooler regions did not have significant influence on their active and standard metabolic rate. Unlabelled Image • A comparison of the standard and active metabolic rate of Polistes dominula and P. gallicus from different climates revealed similarities. • The metabolic rate was nearly the same in both species. • Simultaneous measurement of metabolism and body temperature revealed that increased CO 2 production is accompanied by endothermic activity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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