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Instructions
Topic 10.
Thermoregulation.
________________
(Name)
I. MATERIALS.
Obtain
an adult hawkmoth of the family, Sphingidae, a white-lined sphinx moth
or the tobacco hornworm, Manduca sexta. However, in a pinch,
any large noctuid could be used, or even a bumble bee or honey bee.
The advantage of using Lepidoptera is that if they get loose, the
worse they can do is fly away or land in your soup instead of
delivering a possible sting.
A
thermocouple or thermister thermometer (to be inserted into the
thorax).
A
thermocouple reference junction interface.
A
recorder to monitor temperature. A pen recorder is preferred.
A lamp
with a tungsten bulb that will generate heat, or some other heat
source.
A
magnifying glass, such as one used for reading fine print to focus
heat.
Clamps
and rods to hold the lamp and glass to focus light on the moth.
Dissecting tools.
Tackiwax.
A small
soldering iron, the trigger-operated instant-on type.
A
Variac, or other voltage regulator.
II. LEARNING
OBJECTIVES.
Understand the heating and cooling of the body of the hawkmoth,
Manduca sexta.
How:
Measure
thoracic temperature by adult moths during external heating.
Observe
lack of thermoregulation after disrupting the circulatory system.
Therefore, appreciate the importance of circulation in
thermoregulation.
III. INTRODUCTION.
Small
insects such as ants and termites can regulate their environmental
temperature by a judicious choice of nest site, depth in the soil,
judicious use of insulating materials, or orientation to sun. Size of
the insect is important in retaining heat. If the insect is too
small, the surface to volume ratio is so unfavorable, heat is lost
faster than it can be generated. However, above a certain size, the
surface to volume ratio along with the presence of insulation, usually
by body hairs or scales, allows heat to be built up and retained in
the body with acceptable efficiency.
The selection of site is vital to insects that live in alpine
conditions. Grylloblattids and certain stenopelmatids occupy niches
around glaciers on mountains. These insects can survive in conditions
of outside air temperatures below minus 60°C
because the temperature under a few feet of snow or ice is usually
closer to 0°C.
Indeed the grylloblattids are quickly killed outside the temperature
range of from minus 5.8°C
to plus 10°C.
Although the best known thermoregulators are honey bees, who are able
to maintain a hive temperature within narrow limits through even harsh
winters, the process of thermoregulation in insects is as common as
the porch light on a summer's evening. Noctuid moths are attracted to
porch lights starting in late spring and early summer, depending on
the latitude. Once an adult moth lands and folds its wings, the
process of generating heat ceases because the flight muscles are the
main source of heat build-up. If the thoracic temperature drops too
low, the adult moth will usually activate the antagonistic sets of
direct flight muscles synchronously in isometic contraction so that
heat is generated, but the wings vibrate, but flight is not
initiated. This is seen as a characteristic "shivering" of the adult
moth. Muscle functions are optimized in these moths at elevated
temperatures. The hawkmoth thermoregulates the thorax to 44°C,
which can be some twenty degrees Centigrade above ambient temperatures
when they are active at night, which is remarkable.
Temperature maintenance by bees and moths is accomplished by the
dorsal vessel conducting hemolymph from the abdomen through the
thoracic flight muscles much like radiator water through an internal
combustion engine. However, instead of fluid channels through the
motor and attachment to a water pump and a radiator, the insects
circulate hemolymph through loops of the dorsal vessel in the middle
of the thoracic muscles and use the abdomen for a radiator.
When
the thorax is too hot, the dorsal vessel and ventral diaphragm both
vigorously pump hemolymph through the thorax to draw heat away
eventually to the abdomen where it is dissipated. When the thorax
cools below a set point, the amplitude and frequency of contractions
of the dorsal vessel and ventral diaphragms decrease which in turn
decreases the flow of heat away from the thoracic muscles.
This
system with its precise set temperature implies several things.
First, a thermostat mechanism in one of the thoracic ganglia must be
operating. Second, the thoracic ganglia must contain neurons that
participate in regulation of the ventral diaphragm and dorsal vessel.
Third, the regulation must be capable of controlling both amplitude
and frequency of contractions. The activity of the ventral diaphragm
and dorsal vessel must be correlated.
If the
nervous pathway connecting the thoracic ganglia and the pumps and
diaphragms in the abdomen is disrupted, or if the delivery of
hemolymph via the abdominal dorsal vessel to the thorax is prevented,
the ability to thermoregulate would be lost, in exactly the same
manner that a water cooled motor would overheat if the radiator
function were lost.
An
experiment first published by Bernd Heinrich in 1971 (described in
Heinrich, 1993) will be duplicated here to demonstrate
thermoregulation. Heinrich found that the temperature control of the
thorax of the adult hawkmoth could be demonstrated in a resting adult
mounted so that the wings do not move by merely heating the thorax.
The same thermoregulation mechanism that operated during flight, will
function at rest if the thorax is in danger of being overheated.
IV. DIRECTIONS.
Anesthetize, then mount an adult moth in such a manner that the wings
are immobilized, the abdomen is free to move, and the legs are on a
convenient substrate. Insert a miniature thermocouple into the thorax
and secure it in place with Tackiwax. You can warm a small soldering
iron by plugging it into an adjustable Variac power source, then melt
some Tackiwax on the end of the iron and daub the molten blob of wax
onto the cuticle and thermocouple. If the wax is not too hot, it will
solidify almost immediately, and this should not harm the moth. Or,
secure the thermocouple in place with a drop or two of super-glue.
Check
the function of the thermocouple and then connect to monitoring
instrumentation. We prefer to convert the temperature signal to a
voltage and calibrate a pen recorder to record temperature over time
at a very slow recorder speed.
The
thoracic temperature should be near ambient to start. Now direct a
focused beam of hot light onto the thorax, making sure that the
thermocouple is not heated directly. The temperature being monitored
should start to raise. Leave the light beam in place and monitor the
temperature rise.
Plot
the temperature on a graph and provide a proper label:
[time vs. temp
graph soon to come]
Supply the proper units for the graph after the experiment is
complete. As the thorax is heated, the temperature should rise to
a maximum. Draw an asymptotic line to indicate the maximum set
temperature that the data implies. Enter the maximum temperature
here: ___________. Once you are satisfied that a temperature
maximum has been reached, turn off the lamp and continue to monitor the
temperature. Plot this as well.
Now
there are two options. You may disrupt the circulation of hemolymph
by placing a curved probe through the intersegmental membranes of the
abdomen and tearing the dorsal vessel, or, in a more difficult
operation, you may transect the ventral nerve cord where it passes
between the thorax and abdomen. Either of these operations may
require that the mounted adult moth is held under a dissecting
microscope to see what you are doing.
If you
prefer not to attempt these finer operations, then you may achieve the
same result by applying a hot needle to the dorsal midline of the
abdomen long enough to cauterize the dorsal vessel, or cut the abdomen
more severely. As a last resort, you may remove a part of the abdomen
or ligate it in a severe enough manner to completely disrupt the flow
of hemolymph between the abdomen and thorax.
If any
of these manipulations bother you, you may remove the head of the moth
adult before beginning or pith the brain, if that seems more humane.
Once one of these operations is finished, repeat the heating procedure
used before and again plot the results.
[time vs. temp
graph soon to come]
If your
operation has been successful, there should be a dramatic difference
in the shape of the curve obtained.
Draw a
picture of the moth with the electrodes in place for a permanent
record. A strictly stylized drawing of a side view with circles or
ovals for head, thorax and abdomen is fine. Draw arrows from the two
labels provided to the appropriate places on the figure.
Drawing of the
adult moth used in thermoregulation demonstration.
[Drawing soon to come]
V. SUMMARY
ANALYSIS.
Describe what was learned from this exercise.
VI. REFERENCES.
Heinrich, B. 1993.
The Hot-Blooded Insects. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA.
See Chapter one, pp. 17-75.
_________________
(Name)
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