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Insect Telephone Usage?


I came across an interesting article recently from a Netherlands website, which tells of a discovery by Dutch ecologist Roxina Soler and her colleagues that aboveground and belowground herbivorous insects can communicate with each other by using plants in the same manner as a telephone.

Apparently subterranean insects project chemical warning signals using the leaves of a plant to send a message to aboveground insects that the plant is already 'tenanted'.

It appears that aboveground leaf eating insects prefer plants that have not yet been occupied by subterranean root eating insects.

The chemical signals emitted by underground insects through the leaves of the plant in a telephone-like manner, warn the aboveground insects about their presence.

This messaging enables spatially separated insects to avoid unintentionally competing for the same plant.

Discoveries over recent years indicate that different types of aboveground insects develop slower if they feed on plants with subterranean residents and vice versa.

Incredibly, a mechanism has developed via natural selection, enabling the subterranean and aboveground insects to mutually detect each other, avoiding unnecessary competition.

By using the 'green telephone lines', subterranean insects can also communicate with parasitic wasps who lay their eggs inside aboveground insects: the natural enemy of caterpillars. The volatile signals emitted by the leaves benefit the wasps, as these reveal where they can find a good host for their eggs.

Apparently, the spread of this phenomenon is still unclear, as this method of communication between subterranean and aboveground insects has only been studied in a few systems to date.

Now isn't that interesting use of the telephone!!


This article was researched and written by Ron Simonsen, Managing Director of Callsave Pty Ltd. Callsave is a Telecommunications service provider of long distance telephone calls, specialising in cheap long distance calls within Australia and cheap calls to International destinations. Their website is at http://www.callsave.com.au    You can email Ron at ron@callsave.com.au

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