Affiliation:
1. North Dakota State University, USA;
2. Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, USA;
3. Jackson State University, USA;
4. Brookhaven National Laboratory, USA;
5. Union College, USA
Abstract
Summary
Abdominal pumping in caterpillars has only been documented during molting. Using synchrotron x-ray imaging in conjunction with high-speed flow-through respirometry, we show that Manduca sexta L. caterpillars cyclically contract their bodies in response to hypoxia, resulting in significant compressions of the tracheal system. Compression of tracheae induced by abdominal pumping drives external gas exchange, as evidenced by the high correlation between CO2 emission peaks and body movements. During abdominal pumping, both the frequency and percent diameter change of tracheae increased with body mass. However, abdominal pumping and tracheal compression were only observed in larger, older caterpillars (>0.2 g body mass), suggesting that this hypoxic response increases during ontogeny. The diameters of major tracheae in the thorax increased isometrically with body mass. However, tracheae in the head did not scale with mass, suggesting that there is a large safety margin for oxygen delivery in the head in the youngest animals. Together, these results highlight the need for more studies of tracheal system scaling and suggest that patterns of tracheal investment vary regionally in the body.
Publisher
The Company of Biologists
Subject
Insect Science,Molecular Biology,Animal Science and Zoology,Aquatic Science,Physiology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
32 articles.
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