Formation of Green Pigment and Colour Changes in Orthoptera

1953 ◽  
Vol 44 (2) ◽  
pp. 299-315 ◽  
Author(s):  
Salâhattin Okay

The colour change and formation of green pigment in Mantis, Acrida, Locusta, Schistocerca and Dixippus are studied.There is no background reaction to green and brown or yellow colour in these species.Usually the young nymphs of Mantis are green; some ofthe old nymphs and adults have a tendency to lose the green pigment. Phytophagous nymphsbecome green only when fed on fresh or growing grass. Green individuals may be obtained in darkness on this food (Locusta). The green pigmentdisappears on a diet of dry grass.The colour change from non-green to green, or vice versa, is dependent on the formation or disappearance of the blue component (bile pigment-protein) of green pigment. The blue pigment generally appears first in the blood and is deposited in the integument at the following moult; it does not appear to be a breakdown product of chlorophyll or haematin. It is probably synthesised from a colourless precursor in the peripheral fat body.Observations made on the pericardial cells of Locusta suggest that the blue pigment may be converted into insectorubin.

Cells ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 835
Author(s):  
Selina Kiefer ◽  
Julia Huber ◽  
Hannah Füllgraf ◽  
Kristin Sörensen ◽  
Agnes Csanadi ◽  
...  

Pathological biopsy protocols require tissue marking dye (TMD) for orientation. In some cases (e.g., close margin), additional immunohistochemical analyses can be necessary. Therefore, the correlation between the applied TMD during macroscopy and the examined TMD during microscopy is crucial for the correct orientation, the residual tumour status and the subsequent therapeutic regime. In this context, our group observed colour changes during routine immunohistochemistry. Tissue specimens were marked with various TMD and processed by two different methods. TMD (blue, red, black, yellow and green) obtained from three different providers (A, B and C, and Whiteout/Tipp-Ex®) were used. Immunohistochemistry was performed manually via stepwise omission of reagents to identify the colour changing mechanism. Blue colour from provider A changed during immunohistochemistry into black, when 3,3′-Diaminobenzidine-tetrahydrochloride-dihydrate (DAB) and H2O2 was applied as an immunoperoxidase-based terminal colour signal. No other applied reagents, nor tissue texture or processing showed any influence on the colour. The remaining colours from provider A and the other colours did not show any changes during immunohistochemistry. Our results demonstrate an interesting and important pitfall in routine immunohistochemistry-based diagnostics that pathologists should be aware of. Furthermore, the chemical rationale behind the observed misleading colour change is discussed.


Sensors ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (12) ◽  
pp. 4361
Author(s):  
Tinkara Mastnak ◽  
Aleksandra Lobnik ◽  
Gerhard Mohr ◽  
Matjaž Finšgar

The article presents naked-eye methods for fast, sensitive, and selective detection of isopentylamine and cadaverine vapours based on 4-N,N-dioctylamino-4′-dicyanovinylazobenzene (CR-528) and 4-N,N-dioctylamino-2′-nitro-4′-dicyanovinylazobenzene (CR-555) dyes immobilized in ethylene-vinyl acetate copolymer (EVA). The reaction of CR-528/EVA and CR-555/EVA indicator layers with isopentylamine vapours caused a vivid colour change from pink/purple to yellow/orange-yellow. Additionally, CR-555/EVA showed colour changes upon exposure to cadaverine. The colour changes were analysed by ultraviolet–visible (UV/VIS) molecular absorption spectroscopy for amine quantification, and the method was partially validated for the detection limit, sensitivity, and linear concentration range. The lowest detection limits were reached with CR-555/EVA indicator layers (0.41 ppm for isopentylamine and 1.80 ppm for cadaverine). The indicator layers based on EVA and dicyanovinyl azobenzene dyes complement the existing library of colorimetric probes for the detection of biogenic amines and show great potential for food quality control.


Forests ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 9 (8) ◽  
pp. 488 ◽  
Author(s):  
Davor Kržišnik ◽  
Boštjan Lesar ◽  
Nejc Thaler ◽  
Miha Humar

The importance of the aesthetic performance of wood is increasing and the colour is one of the most important parameters of aesthetics, hence the colour stability of twelve different wood-based materials was evaluated by several in-service and laboratory tests. The wood used for wooden façades and decking belongs to a group of severely exposed surfaces. Discolouration of wood in such applications is a long-known phenomenon, which is a result of different biotic and abiotic causes. The ongoing in-service trial started in October 2013, whilst a laboratory test mimicking seasonal exposure was performed in parallel. Samples were exposed to blue stain fungi (Aureobasidium pullulans and Dothichiza pithyophila) in a laboratory test according to the EN 152 procedure. Afterwards, the same samples were artificially weathered and re-exposed to the same blue stain fungi for the second time. The purpose of this experiment was to investigate the synergistic effect of weathering and staining. The broader aim of the study was to determine the correlation factors between artificial and natural weathering and to compare laboratory and field test data of fungal disfigurement of various bio-based materials. During the four years of exposure, the most prominent colour changes were determined on decking. Respective changes on the façade elements were significantly less prominent, being the lest evident on the south and east façade. The results showed that there are positive correlations between natural weathering and the combination of artificial weathering and blue staining. Hence, the artificial weathering of wood-based materials in the laboratory should consist of two steps, blue staining and artificial weathering, in order to simulate colour changes.


1961 ◽  
Vol 59 (3) ◽  
pp. 295-302 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marjorie V. Mussett ◽  
Mileva Dimic ◽  
Nermin Ege ◽  
J. O'H. Tobin

A modification of the metabolic inhibition test for titrating poliomyelitis antibody is described. The method depends on the substitution of galactose for glucose in the initial medium to eliminate colour change during the period of virus activity. Neutralization is detected by the addition of glucose at the end of the period, when the usual colour changes associated with this type of test occur. A statistical analysis of the results obtained is given.This method can also be used for titrating antibodies to other enteric viruses.Thanks are due to Dr Hélène Mair, Dr D. R. Gamble and Dr A. D. Macrae for strains of enteroviruses, and to Miss Patricia Jerram, for valuable technical assistance in the early days of this work.


2013 ◽  
Vol 9 (6) ◽  
pp. 20130892 ◽  
Author(s):  
Russell A. Ligon ◽  
Kevin J. McGraw

Many animals display static coloration (e.g. of feathers or fur) that can serve as a reliable sexual or social signal, but the communication function of rapidly changing colours (as in chameleons and cephalopods) is poorly understood. We used recently developed photographic and mathematical modelling tools to examine how rapid colour changes of veiled chameleons Chamaeleo calyptratus predict aggressive behaviour during male–male competitions. Males that achieved brighter stripe coloration were more likely to approach their opponent, and those that attained brighter head coloration were more likely to win fights; speed of head colour change was also an important predictor of contest outcome. This correlative study represents the first quantification of rapid colour change using organism-specific visual models and provides evidence that the rate of colour change, in addition to maximum display coloration, can be an important component of communication. Interestingly, the body and head locations of the relevant colour signals map onto the behavioural displays given during specific contest stages, with lateral displays from a distance followed by directed, head-on approaches prior to combat, suggesting that different colour change signals may evolve to communicate different information (motivation and fighting ability, respectively).


It is now firmly established that the coordination of chromatic response in Amphibia is predominantly, if not exclusively, due to the liberation of hormones by reflexes involving visual and skin receptors, and in Reptiles to direct innervation of the pigmentary effector organs (Hogben and Mirvish, 1928; Zoond and Eyre,1934). Among aquatic vertebrates examples of both types of coordination occur. The bulk of available evidence points to the conclusion that the chromatophores of Teleostean fishes are directly innervated and that the comparatively rapid responses which are exhibited by several species are brought about by simple reflex action. That this is not true of cyclostomes has recently been shown by J. Z. Young (1935) whose experiments demonstrate the archaic phylogenetic character of the control exercised by the Amphibian pituitary gland. From an evolutionary standpoint it would not be surprising to find among physiological mechanisms in Teleostean fishes examples of specialization comparable to the strikingly aberrant features which their anatomical organization displays. On the other hand it would be remarkable if the cartilaginous fishes proved an exception to a rule which applies both to Cyclostomes and to Amphibia. Recent work on the colour changes of Elasmobranchs supports the conclusion that the coordination of colour change in Teleostean fishes is highly specialized. Lundstrom and Bard (1932) have shown that total removal of the pituitary gland in Mustelis canis results in a state of pallor which ensues within a few hours after operation, reaching its limit about the twelfth post-operative hour. In their experiments the animals usually succumbed after three or four days with loss of righting reactions. Only a few survived as long as a week. The effect was not produced by removal of the anterior lobe alone, nor by severe traumatization of the hypothalamus. Complete darkening of the pale operated animals followed injections or extracts of ox pituitary and of the pituitary of the fish itself, the quantity present in the fish gland being greatly in excess of the amount requisite to induce full expansion of the dermal melanophores. The present investigation, undertaken to throw further light on the evolution of the chromatic function in Vertebrates, is based on several species of Elasmobranch fishes, namely the skates, Raia Brachiura, R. clavata, R. maculata, R. microcelatus , the speckled dogfish Scyllium canicula , the banded dogfish or nursehound S. catulus (Scylliorhinusstellaris) , and the monkfish Rhina squatina . The writer is indebted to Mr. G. A. Steven for invaluable assistance in identifying the various species used. In all these species the pigmentary effector system of the integument, like that of the American dogfish Mustelis canis , closely resembles that of Amphibia, and consists of three types of chromatophores which are more or less evenly distributed. These are the epidermal melanophores, larger more richly branched dermal melanophores, and xanthophores containing an orange yellow pigment. The same agencies, in the fishes to be described, evoked or maintained pigment diffusion (“expansion”) of all three types, and the concentration of pigment in the centre of the cell (“contraction”) in all three types. That is to say, the xanthophores of a skate or dogfish which was maximally pale were always fully contracted like the melanophores of both kinds, and the xanthophores of a dark animal were fully expanded. This is true of some—but not all—Amphibia. In general appearance the chromatophores of the species studied are more like those of a Urodele than those of a Teleost.


Visible colour changes of animals are of two types, those which result from build-up or breakdown of pigments, and those which result from their redistribution. Assumption of winter dress by some mammals and of breeding dress by some fishes are familiar examples of the former. The proverbial behaviour of the chameleon illustrates the latter. Mere redistribution of pigment may itself come about in several ways. It may result from the responses of contractile tissues sensu stricto or from those of pigmentary effector organs sui generis . Visible colour changes due to the response of contractile tissues include: ( a ) the familiar phenomena of blushing, blanching and cyanosis due to surface variation of the quantity of blood pigment, i. e. to vasodilation, vasoconstriction and capillary stasis; ( b ) the more specialized chromatic behaviour of cephalopods. Cephalopod colour change is brought about by relaxation and contraction of radially disposed plain muscle fibres attached to pigment-containing vesicles. What follows refers only to chro­matic behaviour accomplished by effector organs other than muscle fibres. At present we know of two main types: (i) The pigmentary effector system of vertebrates, of Crustacea and of Annelida (Wells 1932) consists of cells in which pigment granules or droplets migrate to the periphery of diffusely branching processes, thereby offering more surface for absorption of radiation.


1973 ◽  
Vol 51 (1) ◽  
pp. 101-104 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edward Kott

During the spawning migration, the overall color of the sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus L.) becomes progressively more orange. This color development is not due to the chromatophores of the dermis, since the pigment involved is present in either the epidermis and (or) the outer mucus layer. The color, instead, is resultant upon an increase in the concentration of bilirubin, a bile pigment produced as a breakdown product of hemoglobin.


1982 ◽  
Vol 60 (2) ◽  
pp. 138-143 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin B. Hocking ◽  
Trevor A. Smyth

On boiling a yellow solution of 1,2,5-triphenylphosphole in carbon tetrachloride the colour changes to red, reverting to yellow on cooling. This reversible colour change has been conducted in the presence of various additives in an attempt to determine the cause of the colour change. Boiling 1,2,5-triphenylphosphole in α,α,α-trichlorotoluene similarly showed a colour change and gave a coupling product of the solvent, 1,1,2,2-tetrachloro-1-2-diphenylethane. From this evidence and related synthetic, nmr, and esr experiments it is proposed that the colour change of the former system arises from the incipient formation of a phosphole-trichloromethide salt with carbon tetrachloride. With trichlorotoluene the phosphole undergoes more substantive formation of dichlorophenylmethide and possibly chloride salts which undergo further reaction to the observed coupling product.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 324
Author(s):  
Tahmina Akhter ◽  
Mizanur Rahman Molla ◽  
Mahbub Alam ◽  
Tahmida Akhter ◽  
Farjana Akhond ◽  
...  

Background: Temperature is one of the most important factors that are responsible for plastination procedure.Objective: The present study was designed to determine a suitable method of plastination of skeletal muscle in a low-resource setting in Bangladesh.Methods: This observational study was carried out in the Department of Anatomy, Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University (BSMMU), Dhaka, Bangladesh, between March 2015 and February 2016. Six whole pig kidneys (as firmer organ) and six whole pig lungs (as softer organs) were collected from a government authorized slaughterhouse in Dhaka city. Same numbers of organs were designated as ‘Cold Temperature Group’ and ‘Room Temperature Group’. We observed the change in colour at cold and room temperatures after different stages of plastination with a colour chart.Results: After fixation, both the brownish kidneys and reddish pink lungs turned brownish and darker. After dehydration, both the kidneys and lungs got paler. After forced impregnation, the colour turned much darker in both groups. The colour change continued towards a darker tone with time. The specific colour changes quantified into frequencies were very variable in both temperature groups.Conclusion: In observed colour changes, the difference was indeterminate.International Journal of Human and Health Sciences Vol. 05 No. 03 July’21 Page: 324-329


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