. The Demons By Daylight Period

Author(s):  
S.T. Joshi
Keyword(s):  
2001 ◽  
Vol 133 (5) ◽  
pp. 705-708 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ghislain Berleur ◽  
Jean Gingras ◽  
Jean-Claude Tourneur

In North America, the life cycle of the European earwig (Forficula auricularia L.) can be divided into a nesting phase (hypogean phase) and a free-foraging phase (epigean phase) (Crumb et al. 1941; Behura 1956; Lamb and Wellington 1975). Adults spend the nesting phase in the soil; females burrow into the ground at the onset of the cold weather, lay eggs, and then care for the eggs. Hatching occurs in spring; first- or second-instar nymphs move to the soil surface for the free-foraging period. The earwig, a nocturnal insect, spends the entire daylight period of hiding under trash or in dark crevices. Where two broods occur, females reenter the ground a second time (Lamb and Wellington 1975). Stomach content analyses (Crumb et al. 1941; Sunderland and Vickerman 1980) and food preference tests (McLeod and Chant 1952; Buxton and Madge 1976) revealed that the European earwig is omnivorous. Under laboratory conditions, nymphs fed freshly frozen aphids, Rhopalosiphum padi (L.) (Hemiptera: Aphididae), survive better than those fed green algae or carrots, develop faster, and produce heavier females (Phillips 1981; Carrillo 1985).


Ocean Science ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 337-347 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefan Garthe ◽  
Verena Peschko ◽  
Ulrike Kubetzki ◽  
Anna-Marie Corman

Abstract. Understanding distribution patterns, activities, and foraging behaviours of seabirds requires interdisciplinary approaches. In this paper, we provide examples of the data and analytical procedures from a new study in the German Bight (North Sea) tracking northern gannets (Morus bassanus) at their breeding colony on the island of Heligoland. Individual adult northern gannets were equipped with different types of data loggers for several weeks, measuring geographic positions and other parameters mostly at 3–5 min intervals. Birds flew in all directions from the island to search for food, but most flights targeted areas to the (N)NW (north–northwest) of Heligoland. Foraging trips were remarkably variable in duration and distance; most trips lasted 1–15 h and extended from 3 to 80 km from the breeding colony on Heligoland. Dives of gannets were generally shallow, with more than half of the dives only reaching depths of 1–3 m. The maximum dive depth was 11.4 m. Gannets showed a clear diurnal rhythm in their diving activity, with dives being almost completely restricted to the daylight period. Most flight activity at sea occurred at an altitude between the sea surface and 40 m. Gannets mostly stayed away from the wind farms and passed around them much more frequently than flying through them. Detailed information on individual animals may provide important insights into processes that are not detectable at a community level.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefan Garthe ◽  
Verena Peschko ◽  
Ulrike Kubetzki ◽  
Anna-Marie Corman

Abstract. Understanding distribution patterns, activities, and foraging behaviours of seabirds requires interdisciplinary approaches. In this paper, we provide examples of the data and analytical procedures from a new study in the German Bight, North Sea, tracking Northern Gannets (Morus bassanus) at their breeding colony on the island of Helgoland. Individual adult Northern Gannets were equipped with different types of data loggers for several weeks, measuring geographic positions and other parameters mostly at 3–5 min intervals. Birds flew in all directions from the island to search for food, but most flights targeted areas to the (N)NW of Helgoland. Foraging trips were remarkably variable in duration and distance; most trips lasted 1–15 h and extended from 3–80 km from the breeding colony on Helgoland. Dives of gannets were generally shallow, with more than half of the dives only reaching depths of 1–3 m. The maximum dive depth was 11.4 m. Gannets showed a clear diurnal rhythm in their diving activity, with dives being almost completely restricted to the daylight period. Most flight activity at sea occurred at an altitude between the sea surface and 40 m. Gannets mostly stayed away from the wind farms and passed around them much more frequently than flying through them. Detailed information on individual animals may provide important insights into various processes, based on multi-layer information.


1987 ◽  
Vol 114 (2) ◽  
pp. 279-287 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Perret ◽  
A. Schilling

ABSTRACT Sexual activity of the male lesser mouse lemur can be induced by a long photoperiod, and plasma testosterone concentrations increase from 20 to 220 nmol/l within 3 weeks of photoperiodic stimulation. When isolated males were exposed to the volatile compounds from the urine of an active dominant male for 4 weeks at the beginning of the long daylight period, they demonstrated a significant decrease in testosterone concentrations (134± 11 nmol/l) compared with controls (210 ± 26 nmol/l) within 2 weeks. Lowering concentrations of prolactin by daily injections of bromocriptine prevented the decrease in testosterone in males simultaneously exposed to the odorant stimulation. Increasing concentrations of prolactin by daily injections of sulpiride mimicked the effect of the odorant stimulation in males receiving only fresh non-odorized air. The decrease in testosterone was strengthened when sulpiride was administered concurrently with exposure to urine. These results support the conclusion that variations in the concentration of prolactin are involved in the neuroendocrinological process mediating the pheromone-like sexual inhibition in the male lesser mouse lemur. However, daily injections of bromocriptine in males which were photoperiodically stimulated but not exposed to dominant male urine odour, also induced a significant decrease in testosterone concentrations. This finding suggests that two different systems involving prolactin and leading to opposite effects might be implicated in the regulation by environmental factors of sexual activity in the male lesser mouse lemur. J. Endocr. (1987) 114, 279–287


1983 ◽  
Vol 61 (2) ◽  
pp. 317-325 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. H. Marraro ◽  
J. R. Nursall

The redlip blenny, Ophioblennius atlanticus, spawns chiefly within the first 3 h of daylight in the week centred around full moon, probably year-round. A male prepares and guards a nest crevice in his territory; females leave their territories to seek spawning males. A behavioural sequence determines the selection of a female for spawning. Polygyny occurs and possibly polyandry. Male feeding is reduced during spawning period. Spawning females usually are absent from their territories for less than 60 min, but blennies can expel transgressors after absence as long as 660 min, i.e., about one daylight period.


1978 ◽  
Vol 26 (2) ◽  
pp. 169-176 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. A. Vesely

ABSTRACTAn average of 60 Rambouillet and 60 Suffolk ewes was maintained under an intensive management system to lamb about every 7 months. Decreased daylength was used for oestrus induction in normally anoestrous periods. The experiment lasted 3·7 years, during which time six lamb crops were produced, three of them as a result of out-of-season mating. Ewes of each breed were subdivided into three experimental groups and each breed-group was maintained under one of three different light treatments before and during out-of-season mating. Imposed Treatment 1 consisted of a pre-mating period under natural daylight followed by a mating period of short daylength (8 h/day). Ewes under imposed Treatments 2 and 3 were exposed to 16 h of light during the pre-mating period and to 8 h of daylight during the mating period. This did not affect conception significantly in the Rambouillet but it did in the Suffolk. Different intensities and wavelengths of light during the long daylight period (16 h/day) were used in Treatments 2 and 3 but did not cause different responses.In Rambouillet ewes the first mating (out-of-season) gave 73% conception. It was followed by two in-season matings with 72 and 85% conceptions. The last three matings (out-of-season, in-season, out-of-season) resulted in 57, 42, and 58% conceptions. In the Suffolk ewes, the conceptions were 30, 88, 77, 3, 77, and 10% in the same order as those for Rambouillet. The average production ofRambouil-lets on the three treatments was 166 lambs per 100 ewes per year (165, 177, 157) whereas Suffolks produced 132 lambs (120, 143, 135). Control Rambouillet and Suffolk ewes maintained under natural daylight year-round produced 139 and 117 lambs.


1960 ◽  
Vol 50 (4) ◽  
pp. 687-696 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. A. H. McClelland

Since the sharply defined biting cycle shown by outdoor populations, in Uganda, of Aëdes aegypti (L.), which closely resembles oviposition and general activity rhythms, could not be reconciled with the ill-defined patterns found in domestic populations, on the Kenya coast, in the absence of knowledge of the composition of the population involved there, 24-hour baited catches were made at Ganda on the Kenya coast, and the abdominal colour pattern of each individual was noted. In the series there was gradation from the darkest to the palest.Of 427 females taken biting, 82·1 per cent, were of var. queenslandensis (Theo.) in the generally accepted sense, 14·5 per cent, of the type form and 0·9 per cent, of subsp. formosus (Wlk.). The material of var. queenslandensis was further divided into two groups in which the lateral spots on the abdominal tergites were of silver and matt white scales, respectively.Very similar biting cycles, with the main peak in the hour before sunset, occurred both inside a hut and within an adjacent compound, although catches were not concurrent and were made under different seasonal conditions.The distribution of the various colour forms in the total catch was independent of the hour of capture.There is a resemblance between these cycles and those reported in comparable situations in Nigeria, where, with the exception of the paler forms, the population of A. aegypti is similar to that at Ganda. It is concluded that the main biting peak is shortly before sunset. Subsidiary peaks, when present, occur with increasing intensity as the day progresses.The relationship of biting activity to other aspects of general activity is discussed, and it is concluded that several aspects require further investigation.The following hypothesis is offered to account for the various patterns of biting cycle observed in different situations. It is suggested that A. aegypti possesses an endogenous multi-peaked diel rhythm of activity. Activity impulses occur in a cycle of waves of increasing intensity from dawn onwards, reaching a maximum at the end of the daylight period, and a biting peak will result when such an impulse coincides with environmental conditions within the range between upper and lower thresholds of activity.


1997 ◽  
Vol 26 (2) ◽  
pp. 299-308 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ivanildo S. Lima ◽  
Philip E. Howse

Locomotion and grooming in immature adult Anastrepha fraterculus (Wiedemann) (Diptera: Tephritidae) occurred throughout the daylight period. Feeding seemed to be slightly higher in mated than in unmated flies. Ovipositing females showed territoriality and only mated females laid eggs. Males started to display courtship behavior at 5 days old, reaching the complete sexual maturation at day 10. About 54% of the virgin mature females copulated on the day they were paired with virgin males of the same age. Female A. fraterculus seemed to require more than 30 min of mating to supply all spermathecae with sperm, and the efficiency of sperm transference after first mating was 100%.


1972 ◽  
Vol 29 (9) ◽  
pp. 1261-1267 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lawrence F. Small ◽  
Herbert Curl Jr. ◽  
Walter A. Glooschenko

An existing equation for the estimation of primary production from chlorophyll and light data was examined, and revisions were made to allow more precise applications of the equation to upwelling areas and other regions with relatively large fluctuations in chlorophyll concentration and production per unit of chlorophyll during the day. The revised equation was developed by estimating production in 2-hr increments through the daylight period, and integrating by parts to arrive at production in terms of gC m−2 day−1. Total daily production in coastal waters was estimated within ± 13% of mean 14C estimates, on the average, while in offshore waters the estimates averaged within ± 21% of mean 14C estimates. Estimates by the revised equation averaged 52% better in coastal waters, and 32% better in offshore waters, than the basic, unrevised equation.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document