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  • 1
    ISSN: 1573-1561
    Keywords: Lubber grasshopper ; Romalea guttata (microptera) ; Orthoptera ; Acrididae ; generalist herbivore ; dietary regime ; host plant ; artificial diet ; autogenous defense ; phenolics ; quinones ; allbomone ; sequestration ; physiological stress ; plant-insect interaction
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract The lubber grasshopper,Romalea guttata, produces a metathoracic defensive secretion containing primarily phenolics and quinones. This insect feeds on a wide range of plant species. Insects reared on an artificial diet and a diet of onion,Allium canadense, had secretions that contained fewer compounds, lower concentrations of compounds, and markedly altered relative composition of components compared to insects reared on a varied diet of 26 plant species that included onion. The study demonstrates that diet breadth has a major effect on the quality and quantity of the autogenous defensive secretion of this generalist herbivore. The results are compared to diet effects known in chemically defended specialists. Two possible mechanisms explaining the effects of diet breadth are proposed: one involves changes in precursor availability with changing diet breadth; the other suggests that physiological stress due to diet restriction changes allocation of resources to chemical defense.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1573-1561
    Keywords: Lubber grasshopper ; Romalea microptera (=guttata) ; Orthoptera ; Romaleidae ; phenolic secretion ; inter-individual quantitative and qualitative variation ; idiosyncratic patterns
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract The defensive secretion of the lubber grasshopper,Romalea microptera, shows extreme chemical variation among individual adults of the same sex within a single wild population. Certain phenolic compounds were absent in some individuals and present in others. Concentrations of compounds, when present, varied over two to three orders of magnitude. Chemical variation attributable to individuals accounted for 60–88% of the total quantitative variation and was evenly contributed by all individuals in both sexes. Cluster and regression analyses showed no discernible predictable patterns in the defensive secretion variation. The specificity of chemical cues used by predators may explain why these defenses are so idiosyncratic.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1573-1561
    Keywords: Lubber grasshopper ; Romalea guttata (microptera) ; Orthoptera ; Acrididae ; onion ; generalist diet ; artificial diet ; sulfur volatiles ; ant predation ; casual bioaccumulation ; specialization ; evolution of defenses
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract The lubber grasshopper,Romalea guttata, is a generalist feeding on a broad diet of many herbaceous plant species and has a metathoracic defensive secretion normally containing phenolics and quinones synthesized by the insect. When insects were reared on a restricted diet of wild onion, they sequestered sulfur volatiles from the plant into their defensive secretions. These compounds were not detected by gas chromatography-mass spectroscopy in secretions of insects on an artificial diet or a natural, generalist diet of 26 plants that included wild onion as a component, nor were they present in secretions from field-collected insects. Defensive secretions of insects reared on wild onion were significantly more deterrent, by as much as an order of magnitude, to two species of ant predators than secretions from insects on either of the other two diets, despite a reduction in the concentration of autogenous defensive chemicals in secretions of insects on the onion diet. Sequestration of plant chemicals that increased defensive efficacy occurred when diet breadth was reduced. We suggest that this occurs because under conditions of specialization, plant secondary metabolites are more likely to be ingested and bioaccumulated in sufficient concentrations to have biological activity against predators. What we define as casual bioaccumulation of bioactive plant chemicals following dietary specialization may lead to evolution of sequestered defense syndromes in insects, and this process may not necessarily require specific adaptation to or coevolution with a toxic host plant.
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2011-08-19
    Description: The classical and anomalous transport properties of a multifluid plasma consisting of H(+), O(+), and electron populations in the presence of auroral field-aligned return currents are investigated, using a multimoment fluid model with anomalous transport coefficients. The macroscopic effects of the electrostatic ion cyclotron (EIC) instability and of an EIC-related anomalous resistivity mechanism which heats the electrons are included in the present version of the model. The responses of the outflowing polar wind plasma to the application of current, with and without instabilities, are exhibited. The simulations show that the electron drift velocity corresponding to a return current of 0.65 micro-A/sq m is above the threshold for EIC waves. Downward electron heat flow competes with upward convection and adiabatic effects to determine the direction of the electron temperature anisotropy. Resistive electron heating lowers the critical drift velocity for marginal EIC stability and leads to enhanced ion heating.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
    Type: Journal of Geophysical Research (ISSN 0148-0227); 92; 8673-869
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2011-08-19
    Description: This article provides a broad survey of U.S. progress during the quadrennium 1983-1986 in the category 'numerical simulations of magnetospheric plasmas'. There has been a substantial increase of activity in this area during this period. Simulations have been instrumental in providing valuable insights into large scale dynamic phenomena, nonlinear effects, and complex kinetic phenomena in a wide variety of subject areas, including shocks and double layers, ionosphere-magnetosphere coupling phenomena, and important microphysical processes such as broadband electrostatic noise. The methodology of computer simulation has also been advanced during this quadrennium. Vlasov algorithms have been improved; hybrid codes in 2 and 3D have been developed and applied to magnetospheric problems; and complex problems have been subjected with increasing frequency to a multipronged attack in which several types of simulation models, each designed to accurately model phenomena within a particular range of temporal or spatial scales, are employed synergistically.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
    Type: Reviews of Geophysics (ISSN 8755-1209); 25; 599-613
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2011-08-19
    Description: The use of the Lageos satellite to monitor the earth's orientation is examined. The derivations of long wavelength ocean tidal parameters, a geocentric gravitational constant of 398,600.436 cu km/ sq sec + or - 0.0001 cu km/sq sec, and Love numbers using Lageos laser ranging data are described. The uncertainties of the geopotential model, GEM-L2 of Lerch et al. (1982), are discussed. The calculation of polar motion using the Lageos constants is considered. The Lageos constants are tested by applying them to independent laser ranging data. It is determined that the new constants improve the rms of fit to independent Lageos data and improve the earth orientation parameters compared to VLBI data obtained during the IRIS project.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2013-08-31
    Description: A new, geometrical, first order, nonresonant, frozen orbit theory was developed based on Orlov's uniformly rotating plane of constant inclination. Perturbation spectra generated from a 90th order subset of OSU86F are shown for the ill-fated 1984 JHU/APL SAGE proposal for a pair of TRANSIT satellites at 400 km altitude with a 93.5 deg inclination.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
    Type: Ohio State Univ., Progress in the Determination of the Earth's Gravity Field; p 151-154
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2011-08-19
    Description: Fluid simulations of the plasma along auroral field lines in the return current region have been performed. It is shown that the onset of electrostatic ion cyclotron (EIC) related anomalous resistivity and the consequent heating of electrons leads to a transverse ion temperature that is much higher than that produced by the current driven EIC instability (CDICI) alone. Two processes are presented for the enhancement of ion heating by anomalous resistivity. The anomalous resistivity associated with the turbulence is limited by electron heating, so that CDICI saturates at transverse temperature that is substantially higher than in the absence of resistivity. It is suggested that this process demonstrates a positive feedback loop in the interaction between CDICI, anomalous resistivity, and parallel large-scale dynamics in the topside ionosphere.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
    Type: Geophysical Research Letters (ISSN 0094-8276); 15; 1291-129
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: Plasma plumes are injected into the tail of the simulated earth's magnetosphere produced by an interaction between the simulated solar wind and a magnetic dipole. The behavior of laboratory artificial plasma plumes injected into the magnetized plasma flow is discussed in conjunction with the AMPTE artificial comet experiments (Minami et al., 1986) and other active chemical release experiments in space.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
    Type: Journal of Geomagnetism and Geoelectricity (ISSN 0022-1392); 40; 10 1; 1283-130
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: Constraints on the origin of Archean trondhemites were investigated by studying the T-X(H2O) phase relationships, as a function of water content, of the trondhjemitic Nuk gneiss (the principal component of the second phase of Archean igneous activity in the Godthab region, Greenland) with water at 15-kbar pressure. High-pressure experiments were completed in a piston-cylinder apparatus wih samples enclosed in gold capsules, and phase assemblages exposed on polished surfaces of run products and analyzed using optical microscope, SEM, and electron microprobe. The data obtained were found to be consistent with the multistage development model for the Archean crust in Finland, developed by Jahn et al. (1984), which calls for at least three stages of crustal development.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
    Type: Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology (ISSN 0010-7999); 100; 35-46
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