Invertebrate Pheromones Flashcards

1
Q

Define pheromones

A

Chemicals used for communication (within a species?)

‘pherein’ Greek = to carry or to transfer

‘hormon’ Greek = to excite

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2
Q

Provide a list of important names mentioned in class related to influential pheromone studies

A

Jean-Henri Fabre
Karl von Frisch
Adolph Butenandt
Karlson + Luscher

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3
Q

Who was Jean-Henri Fabre and what did he do?

A

an entomologist in the 1800-1900s who studied: PINE PROCESSIONARY MOTHS/CATERPILLARS

he observed that these caterpillars walk in procession and asked how they knew how to do that and where to go? thought chemicals and mechano-sensation must be involved

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4
Q

Who was Karl von Frisch and what did he do?

A

an ethologist who first studied EUROPEAN MINNOWS (and later bees)

he removed the fins of minnows and returned them to the tank and observed that other minnows would dart away

he determined that the injured fish released an ALARM pheromone when returned to warn the other fish - he called it ‘Schneckstopp’

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5
Q

What was the pheromone von Frisch first discovered? who was the sender, receiver, and what was the response?

A

he called it ‘Schneckstopp’ - an alarm pheromone

sender: injured minnow

receiver: other minnows

response: caused other minnows to scatter from the injured fish

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6
Q

Who was Adolph Butenandt? what did he do?

A

He won the Nobel Prize for chemistry in 1939 for isolating and determining the structure of the sex hormone and ATTRACTANT pheromone in SILKWORM MOTHS - it was the first real study on pheromone communication

called the pheromone: BOMBYKOL

he did a bioassay of the glands and separated out the components based on chemical properties and tested each fraction to determine which caused the attraction response in males

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7
Q

What is Bombykol? who is the sender, receiver, and what is the response?

A

the ATTRACTANT pheromone named by Butenandt

Sender: female silkworm moths

receiver: male silkworm moths

response: attraction

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8
Q

How do the male silkworm moths receive the female’s Bombykol pheromone?

A

they have high sensitivity in their hair antennae (with many sensilla pl.) which increases the surface area for increased reception

it causes the males to walk toward the females fluttering their wings (flight would cause the pheromone to move too quickly passed their antennae)

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9
Q

Define semiochemicals and give an example of one

A

“Semeion” = Greek for ‘sign’

chemicals that are used for communication or to elicit a response

ex. hormones that work within an individual

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10
Q

Define allelochemicals

A

chemicals that communicate between heterospecific organisms (different species)

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11
Q

Define hormones

A

chemicals to communicate within an individual

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12
Q

What did Karlson & Luscher do?

A

they coined the term ‘pheromone’ for communication within a species (intraspecific)

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13
Q

What are the major pheromone categories in invertebrates?

A
  1. alarm
  2. attractant
  3. aggregation
  4. hatching
  5. territory marking
  6. trail marking
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14
Q

What are the 6 general characteristics of pheromones?

A
  1. old
  2. ubiquitous
  3. organic molecules
  4. required in low concentration
  5. specificity
  6. diversity
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15
Q

What are the 5 functional (not universal) characteristics of pheromones?

A
  1. volatility
  2. stability
  3. persistence
  4. duality
  5. derived from existing chemicals
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16
Q

Explain how all pheromones are old; give an example

A

they have an ancient origin and have been evolving over time

ex. bacteria use them and bacteria are ancient - Streptomyces faecilis use an aggregation pheromone

17
Q

Explain how all pheromones are ubiquitous

A

pheromones are used in every organism from bacteria, algae, water moulds, plants, invertebrates and vertebrates

17
Q

Explain how all pheromones are organic molecules; give an example

A

every example of a pheromone has an organic molecular structure

18
Q

Explain how all pheromones are only required in low concentrations; give an example

A

only a low concentration of the pheromone is required to elicit a response in the receiver

19
Q

Explain how all pheromones are specific - list the different ways pheromones can be specific

A

specificity includes:
- timing
- molecule size
- stereoisomers
- plumes (multi-component mixtures)
- concentration

20
Q

Give an example of how pheromones can be specific related to timing

A

bolas spider females release different pheromones at different times of the day to signal to different moth species depending on their activity

21
Q

Give an example of how pheromones can be specific related to concentration

A

ex. concentration differences can elicit different responses in the receiver

ex. soybean cyst nematodes: small concentrations from females attract males and cause him to coil; large concentrations cause paralysis in males