Back to Search Start Over

Increasing metabolic rate despite declining body weight in an adult parasitoid wasp.

Authors :
Casas, Jérôme
Body, Mélanie
Gutzwiller, Florence
Giron, David
Lazzari, Claudio R.
Pincebourde, Sylvain
Richard, Romain
Llandres, Ana L.
Source :
Journal of Insect Physiology. Aug2015, Vol. 79, p27-35. 9p.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Metabolic rate is a positive function of body weight, a rule valid for most organisms and the basis of several theories of metabolic ecology. For adult insects, however, the diversity of relationships between body mass and respiration remains unexplained. The aim of this study is to relate the respiratory metabolism of a parasitoid with body weight and foraging activity. We compared the metabolic rate of groups of starving and host-fed females of the parasitoid Eupelmus vuilleti recorded with respirometry for 7 days, corresponding to the mean lifetime of starving females and over half of the lifetime of foraging females. The dynamics of carbohydrate, lipid and protein in the body of foraging females were quantified with biochemical techniques. Body mass and all body nutrients declined sharply from the first day onwards. By contrast, the CO 2 produced and the O 2 consumed increased steadily. Starving females showed the opposite trend, identifying foraging as the reason for the respiration increase of feeding females. Two complementary physiological processes explain the unexpected relationship between increasing metabolic rate and declining body weight. First, host hemolymph is a highly unbalanced food, and the excess nutrients (protein and carbohydrate) need to be voided, partially through excretion and partially through respiration. Second, a foraging young female produces eggs at an increasing rate during the first half of its lifetime, a process that also increases respiration. We posit that the time-varying metabolic rate contributions of the feeding and reproductive processes supplements the contribution of the structural mass and lead to the observed trend. We extend our explanations to other insect groups and discuss the potential for unification using Dynamic Energy Budget theory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00221910
Volume :
79
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Insect Physiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
108455688
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jinsphys.2015.05.005