New Approach to Evaluate the Antennal Response of an Adult Predator Insect to Different Volatile Chemical Compounds by using Electroantennogram Technique

2008 ◽  
Vol 8 (9) ◽  
pp. 1692-1698 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mourad L. Shonoud
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katharina Brandt ◽  
Stefan Dötterl ◽  
Santiago R. Ramírez ◽  
Florian Etl ◽  
Isabel Cristina Machado ◽  
...  

Male euglossine bees exhibit unique adaptations for the acquisition and accumulation of chemical compounds from “perfume flowers” and other sources. During courtship display, male bees expose perfume mixtures, presumably to convey species-specific recognition and/or mate choice signals to females. Because olfaction regulates both signal production (in males) and signal detection (in females) in this communication system, strong selective pressures are expected to act on the olfactory system, which could lead to sensory specialization in favor of an increased sensitivity to specific chemical compounds. The floral scents of euglossine-pollinated plants are hypothesized to have evolved in response to the preexisting sensory biases of their male euglossine bee pollinators. However, this has never been investigated at the peripheral olfactory circuitry of distinct pollinating genera. Here, we present a comparative analysis using electroantennography (EAG) of males across the phylogeny of 29 euglossine bee species, among them Euglossa and Eulaema species. First, we tested whether antennal responses differ among different euglossine genera, subgenera and species. Secondly, we conducted a comparative phylogenetic analysis to investigate the macroevolutionary patterns of antennal responses across the euglossine bee phylogeny. We found that antennal response profiles are very unique on the species level and differ on the subgenus and the genus level. The differences can be explained by chemical compounds typically found in the floral scent bouquets of perfume flowers and specific compounds of species either pollinated by Euglossa (e.g., ipsdienol) or Eulaema bees (e.g., (−)-(E)-carvone epoxide). Also, we detected a phylogenetic signal in mean antennal responses and found that especially at the species level of our simulation the overall antennal responses exhibit greater disparity relative to a null model of pure Brownian-motion across the phylogeny. Altogether, our results suggest that (1) euglossine bee species exhibit species-specific antennal responses that differ among euglossine genera and subgenera, (2) antennal responses diverge early after speciation events, and (3) scent composition of perfume flowers evolved in response to pollinator-mediated selection imposed by preexisting sensory biases in euglossine bees.


2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-13 ◽  
Author(s):  
Boris I. Sedunov

The equilibrium molecular interactions in pure real gases are investigated based on the chemical thermodynamics principles. The parallels between clusters in real gases and chemical compounds in equilibrium media have been used to improve understanding of the real gas structure. A new approach to the equilibrium constants for the cluster fractions and new methods to compute them and their significant parameters from the experimental thermophysical data are developed. These methods have been applied to some real gases, such as Argon and Water vapors and gaseous Alkanes. It is shown that the four-particle clusters make a noticeable contribution in the thermophysical properties of the equilibrium Water vapor. It is shown also that the effective bond energy for dimers in Alkanes linearly grows with the number of carbon atoms in the molecule.


2007 ◽  
Vol 61 (1) ◽  
pp. 18-22
Author(s):  
Goran Tadic ◽  
Branko Pejovic ◽  
Miladin Gligoric ◽  
Vladan Micic

The problem of calculating stoichiometric coefficients in a chemical equation can be solved by standard methods and the method of multidimensional vector space, but good knowledge of vector algebra is required. In this paper, the authors proposed a matrix method and other treatment of the problem was given as the authors' own interpretation. A matrix was formed in the form of base using all the elements which take place in a chemical reaction, after which the matrixes of all the chemical compounds were determined based on numerical indexes and element symbols. This approach enables the setting of a principal matrix equation based on a mathematical approach. The solutions of this matrix equation are the desired stoichiometric coefficients that form a balanced equation. A new approach to tabular solving is presented. This method, compared to existing standard methods, is faster, simpler, and more effective, especially for complex chemical equations. The method was tasted on examples from inorganic chemistry and metallurgy.


2012 ◽  
Vol 58 (1) ◽  
pp. 77-87 ◽  
Author(s):  
T.V. Sirota

The reaction of adrenaline autoxidation in an alkaline buffer with the formation of superoxide radicals and the product of its oxidation, adrenochrome, which models the quinoid pathway of adrenaline conversion in the body, is accompanied by oxygen consumption. This reaction is applicable for polarographic determination of the activity of superoxide dismutase and the antioxidant properties of biological and chemical compounds, it is based on evaluation of the latent period and the rate of oxygen consumption, which are measured in the presence of the compounds examined. It was assumed that the neuro- and cardiotoxicity of quinone products of adrenaline oxidation is related not only to their "own" properties and reactive oxygen species formed but also the hypoxia of those regions of the cell and tissue where the quinoid oxidation of adrenaline occurs.


1995 ◽  
Vol 78 (6) ◽  
pp. 1429-1434 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laurent B Fay ◽  
Andreas A Staempfli

Abstract Chemical compounds responsible for off flavors in foodstuffs are often difficult to identify because of their low levels in complex matrixes. A simple method is described to detect and identify off flavor compounds by gas chromatographic/mass spectrometric (GC/MS) analysis and data processing for sorting the GC/MS files in 14-ion series. The 14 homologous-ion series correspond to the sum of the intensities of the ions, x + (CH2)n, where x varies from 1 to 14 and n varies from 1 to ∞, allowing to cover the whole acquired mass range. Processing of the ion series allows automatic screening of all acquired masses. We use this method routinely in our laboratory to find compounds responsible for a contamination. It is a powerful tool for off flavor identification by comparison between a reference and a contaminated sample. The method can be used with any type of data system and any chromatographic instrument coupled to a mass spectrometer.


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