Vibratory signals of four Neotropical stink bug species
The stink bugs Acrosternum impicticorne, Euschistus heros, Piezodorus guildinii and Thyanta perditor (Heteroptera: Pentatomidae) feed and mate on the same host plants and constitute major components of the soybean pest complex in Brazil. During mating, they communicate with species and sex-specific...
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Published in | Physiological entomology Vol. 30; no. 2; pp. 175 - 188 |
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Main Authors | , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
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Oxford, UK; Malden, USA
Blackwell Science Ltd
01.06.2005
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc |
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Abstract | The stink bugs Acrosternum impicticorne, Euschistus heros, Piezodorus guildinii and Thyanta perditor (Heteroptera: Pentatomidae) feed and mate on the same host plants and constitute major components of the soybean pest complex in Brazil. During mating, they communicate with species and sex-specific vibratory signals whose spectral properties are characteristic of the subfamily Pentatominae. Songs differ between species in the time structure and amplitude modulation of their units. The repertoire of A. impicticorne, E. heros and T. perditor fits into the scheme described for most investigated stink bugs: females call with a sequence of pulses that differ between species in their duration and repetition rate, and males respond with courtship songs of species-specific temporal structure and amplitude modulation of complex pulse trains. Female calling and male courtship songs are the main constituents of vibratory communication between sexes in the mating period. The other vibratory emissions appear to represent either transitional songs, support recognition during close-range courtship, or are involved in male rivalry. The first recorded vibratory emissions of P. guildinii confirm that the genus Piezodorus represents an exception within the Pentatominae. Irregularly repeated female vibratory signals of P. guildinii do not trigger typical male courtship responses as they would in the small stink bugs Holcostethus strictus and Murgantia histrionica. On the other hand, complex rivalry with extensive frequency modulation of pulses, as also described in Piezodorus lituratus, opens a new insight into the role of vibratory communication in stink bugs. |
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AbstractList | The stink bugs
Acrosternum impicticorne
,
Euschistus heros
,
Piezodorus guildinii
and
Thyanta perditor
(Heteroptera: Pentatomidae) feed and mate on the same host plants and constitute major components of the soybean pest complex in Brazil. During mating, they communicate with species and sex‐specific vibratory signals whose spectral properties are characteristic of the subfamily Pentatominae. Songs differ between species in the time structure and amplitude modulation of their units. The repertoire of
A. impicticorne
,
E. heros
and
T. perditor
fits into the scheme described for most investigated stink bugs: females call with a sequence of pulses that differ between species in their duration and repetition rate, and males respond with courtship songs of species‐specific temporal structure and amplitude modulation of complex pulse trains. Female calling and male courtship songs are the main constituents of vibratory communication between sexes in the mating period. The other vibratory emissions appear to represent either transitional songs, support recognition during close‐range courtship, or are involved in male rivalry. The first recorded vibratory emissions of
P. guildinii
confirm that the genus
Piezodorus
represents an exception within the Pentatominae. Irregularly repeated female vibratory signals of
P. guildinii
do not trigger typical male courtship responses as they would in the small stink bugs
Holcostethus strictus
and
Murgantia histrionica
. On the other hand, complex rivalry with extensive frequency modulation of pulses, as also described in
Piezodorus lituratus,
opens a new insight into the role of vibratory communication in stink bugs. . The stink bugs Acrosternum impicticorne, Euschistus heros, Piezodorus guildinii and Thyanta perditor (Heteroptera: Pentatomidae) feed and mate on the same host plants and constitute major components of the soybean pest complex in Brazil. During mating, they communicate with species and sex‐specific vibratory signals whose spectral properties are characteristic of the subfamily Pentatominae. Songs differ between species in the time structure and amplitude modulation of their units. The repertoire of A. impicticorne, E. heros and T. perditor fits into the scheme described for most investigated stink bugs: females call with a sequence of pulses that differ between species in their duration and repetition rate, and males respond with courtship songs of species‐specific temporal structure and amplitude modulation of complex pulse trains. Female calling and male courtship songs are the main constituents of vibratory communication between sexes in the mating period. The other vibratory emissions appear to represent either transitional songs, support recognition during close‐range courtship, or are involved in male rivalry. The first recorded vibratory emissions of P. guildinii confirm that the genus Piezodorus represents an exception within the Pentatominae. Irregularly repeated female vibratory signals of P. guildinii do not trigger typical male courtship responses as they would in the small stink bugs Holcostethus strictus and Murgantia histrionica. On the other hand, complex rivalry with extensive frequency modulation of pulses, as also described in Piezodorus lituratus, opens a new insight into the role of vibratory communication in stink bugs. The stink bugs Acrosternum impicticorne, Euschistus heros, Piezodorus guildinii and Thyanta perditor (Heteroptera: Pentatomidae) feed and mate on the same host plants and constitute major components of the soybean pest complex in Brazil. During mating, they communicate with species and sex-specific vibratory signals whose spectral properties are characteristic of the subfamily Pentatominae. Songs differ between species in the time structure and amplitude modulation of their units. The repertoire of A. impicticorne, E. heros and T. perditor fits into the scheme described for most investigated stink bugs: females call with a sequence of pulses that differ between species in their duration and repetition rate, and males respond with courtship songs of species-specific temporal structure and amplitude modulation of complex pulse trains. Female calling and male courtship songs are the main constituents of vibratory communication between sexes in the mating period. The other vibratory emissions appear to represent either transitional songs, support recognition during close-range courtship, or are involved in male rivalry. The first recorded vibratory emissions of P. guildinii confirm that the genus Piezodorus represents an exception within the Pentatominae. Irregularly repeated female vibratory signals of P. guildinii do not trigger typical male courtship responses as they would in the small stink bugs Holcostethus strictus and Murgantia histrionica. On the other hand, complex rivalry with extensive frequency modulation of pulses, as also described in Piezodorus lituratus, opens a new insight into the role of vibratory communication in stink bugs. |
Author | Borges, Miguel Laumann, Raul Alberto Cokl, Andrej Moraes, Maria Carolina Blassioli |
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Cites_doi | 10.1111/j.1570-7458.1987.tb00546.x 10.1016/S0376-6357(02)00186-9 10.1006/anbe.1999.1272 10.1007/978-1-4612-0585-2_7 10.1046/j.1365-3032.2000.00187.x 10.1007/BF02518817 10.1007/BF02350873 10.1007/s004240000133 10.1590/S0301-80591998000400008 10.1016/S0376-6357(00)00144-3 10.1111/j.0307-6962.2004.00395.x 10.1023/A:1011115111592 10.1023/A:1022898620429 10.1023/A:1021164021489 10.1007/BF00299304 10.1146/annurev.ento.48.091801.112605 10.1093/ee/6.1.169 10.4039/N02-078 10.1603/0013-8746(2001)094[0471:COSBVS]2.0.CO;2 |
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Snippet | The stink bugs Acrosternum impicticorne, Euschistus heros, Piezodorus guildinii and Thyanta perditor (Heteroptera: Pentatomidae) feed and mate on the same host... . The stink bugs Acrosternum impicticorne, Euschistus heros, Piezodorus guildinii and Thyanta perditor (Heteroptera: Pentatomidae) feed and mate on the same... The stink bugs Acrosternum impicticorne , Euschistus heros , Piezodorus guildinii and Thyanta perditor (Heteroptera: Pentatomidae) feed and mate on the same... |
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SubjectTerms | Acrosternum Acrosternum impicticorne Brazil courtship courtship songs Euschistus heros female songs Holcostethus strictus insect communication male songs mating behavior mating behaviour Murgantia histrionica Piezodorus guildinii Piezodorus lituratus soybean pest complex species differences stink bugs substrate-borne signals substrate-borne vibrational signals Thyanta perditor vibration vibratory communication |
Title | Vibratory signals of four Neotropical stink bug species |
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