Artículos de revistas
ARE CORPORAL ALLOMETRIC MEASUREMENTS GOOD PREDICTORS OF PALATABILITY IN NEOTROPICAL BUTTERFLIES (LEPIDOPTERA)?
Registro en:
Entomological News. Amer Entomol Soc, v. 121, n. 2, n. 172, n. 185, 2010.
0013-872X
WOS:000292371300009
Autor
Martins, VF
Alonso, APD
Peixoto, PEC
Romero, GQ
Institución
Resumen
Since palatable butterflies are more dependent on evasive flight to escape from predators, they should be more restricted in their flight-related morphology than unpalatable ones. We compared: the ratios between the (1) length of head plus thorax and the length of abdomen (A/B), (2) length of the tip of the head to wing base and the length of the wing base to end of the abdomen (C/D), (3) the variances of A/B and C/D, (4) the proportion between the thoracic and the body weight, and (5) the flight speed between palatable and unpalatable butterflies. A/B and thoracic/body weight were higher for palatable species, indicating higher body symmetry and muscular mass. However, flight speed did not differ. Unexpectedly, the variance of A/B was higher for palatable species while that of C/D did not differ. Therefore, corporal allometric measurements of Neotropical butterflies are good predictors of palatability, though not of flight speed. 121 2 172 185 Ecologia of Universidade Estadual de Campinas