Abstrakt: |
Recent findings on differences between the gregarious and solitary phases of locusts are reviewed in relation to flight fuel utilization, adipokinetic responses, and adipokinetic hormones. Laboratory results obtained with Locusta migratoria migratorioidesshow that the amount of lipid reserves, resting levels of haemolymph lipids, and hyperlipaemic responses to flight and to injection of corpus cardiacum extract or of synthetic adipokinetic hormones, are higher in crowded than in isolated locusts. No major phase-dependent differences seem to exist in flight-related carbohydrate metabolism. The adipokinetic hormone content of the corpora cardiaca is higher in younger isolated locusts than in crowded ones. Adipokinetic hormone precursor-related peptide content of the corpora cardiaca is also higher in isolated than in crowded locusts. Crowded locusts have higher lipid reserves and higher hyperlipaemic responses to flight than isolated locusts also in Schistocerca gregariaand, following injection of synthetic adipokinetic hormone, the formation of low density lipophorin is higher in crowded than in isolated locusts of this species. The laboratory results obtained with isolated and crowded locusts are extrapolated to understand the ecophysiology of the migrations of solitary and gregarious field populations of L.m. migratorioidesaccording to available information on the differences in the migration of the two phases. It is inferred that in this species solitary locusts have a rather coarse adipokinetic strategy focused on a single prereproductive long-distance migratory flight, whereas gregarious locusts possess a fine adipokinetic balance for reiterative, sometimes unpredictably long-distance, migrations in the prereproductive, as well as reproductive, periods. The differences between the adipokinetic strategies of solitary and gregarious S. gregariaseem to be less dramatic, nevertheless, they indicate a better adaptation of the gregarious phase to prolonged flights. |