1. Respiration patterns of resting wasps (Vespula sp.).
- Author
-
Käfer, Helmut, Kovac, Helmut, and Stabentheiner, Anton
- Subjects
- *
VESPULA , *WASP behavior , *RESPIRATION , *BODY movement , *LOCOMOTION , *INSECT physiology , *INSECTS - Abstract
We investigated the respiration patterns of wasps (Vespula sp.) in their viable temperature range (2.9–42.4°C) by measuring CO2 production and locomotor and endothermic activity. Wasps showed cycles of an interburst–burst type at low ambient temperatures (T a <5°C) or typical discontinuous gas exchange patterns with closed, flutter and open phases. At high T a of >31°C, CO2 emission became cyclic. With rising T a they enhanced CO2-emission primarily by an exponential increase in respiration frequency, from 2.6mHz at 4.7°C to 74mHz at 39.7°C. In the same range of T a CO2 release per cycle decreased from 38.9 to 26.4μlg−1 cycle−1. A comparison of wasps with other insects showed that they are among the insects with a low respiratory frequency at a given resting metabolic rate (RMR), and a relatively flat increase of respiratory frequency with RMR. CO2 emission was always accompanied by abdominal respiration movements in all open phases and in 71.4% of the flutter phases, often accompanied by body movements. Results suggest that resting wasps gain their highly efficient gas exchange to a considerable extent via the length and type of respiration movements. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF