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Appendix I. Course
Syllabus
Insect Physiology
University of California, Riverside
January 5, 1996
1. Introduction to
insects.
The
Class Insecta compared to closely related arthropods.
Comparative
phylogeny. There remain hundreds of thousands of undescribed and
undiscovered species of insects in the world. Despite this, all of
the principles of insect physiology were developed from detailed
studies of relatively few insects. The choice of experimental animal
often amounts to convenience driven by local circumstances with a good
deal of pure luck thrown in.
The
scientific names of some of the more common insects used in
physiological studies are: Thermobia domestica; Mantis
religiosa, Periplaneta americana; Acheta domesticus,
Locusta migratoria, Schistocerca gregaria; Carausius
morosus; Myzus persicae, Oncopeltus fasciatus, Rhodnius
prolixus; Tenebrio molitor; Apis mellifera; Aedes
aegypti, Sarcophaga bullata, Culex pipiens,
Drosophila melanogaster, Musca domestica; Bombyx mori,
Danaus plexippus, Hyalophora cecropia, Manduca sexta,
Pectinophora gossypiella.
Common
names of insects: firebrat, praying mantis, cockroach, cricket,
grasshopper, locust, stick insect, aphid or plant lice, milkweed bug,
kissing bug, yellow mealworm, honey bee, mosquito, black blowfly,
vinegar fly, housefly, silkworm, monarch butterfly, giant silk moth,
tobacco hornworm, and pink bollworm.
Primitive versus advanced insects can be separated into ametabola
(firebrats), hemimetabola (praying mantises, cockroaches, locusts,
aphids, bugs) and holometabola (mealworm, honey bees, flies, moths).
Endopterygota and exopterygota also describe and separate the hemi-
and holometabola. The theory of the pupal stage will be described in
class.
Some
other terms: univoltine, cladistics, phylum.
Friday
laboratory/demonstration.
The
first lab session will be spent with computer familiarization and
obtaining accounts for class members. Appropriate insects will then be
searched from the Entomology Department database and described.
Principles described in lecture will be reinforced with visual
demonstrations, and media presentations covering the diversity of
insects.
2. Integument.
The
cuticle, physical description. The formation of the cuticle. Growth
of insects necessitating molting. The molt. Apolysis. The
physiology of molting. Molting fluid. The mode of action of
benzoylureas as insecticides. The chemistry of chitin. The tanning
process. Plasticization of the cuticle. Eclosion. Eclosion
hormone. Ecdysis. Resilin protein, properties. The growth of
cuticle. The deposition of cuticle. Waterproofing properties of
integument.
3. Hormones.
This
and the following two lectures cover the discovery of insect
hormones. Brain hormone, structure and function. Molting hormone,
structure and function. Juvenile hormone, structure and function.
4. Hormones,
lecture two.
The
second lab/demonstration session will involve a review of the major
insect hormones and endocrine glands, a demonstration of endocrine
glands under a microscope, then ligature of larvae insects by the
class members to demonstrate the head critical stage, and treatment of
insects with juvenile hormone analogs. The results of these
experiments will be read the following week.
Friday
laboratory/demonstration.
The
second lab will have a variety of preparations of insect endocrine
tissues to view in dissecting microscope including the prothoracic
gland and corpora cardiaca/allata complex. Then insects will be
treated with juvenile hormone analogs, and set aside; ecdysone analogs
and set aside; benzoylureas and set aside. Then a number of insect
larvae will be ligatured to demonstrate the head critical stage and
set aside. These treated insects will all be “read” the following
week. Video tape the ligature procedure for archiving in the
computer.
5. Hormones,
lecture three.
6. Hormones,
related subjects.
The
Banana experiment. The paper factor. Bursicon. Plasticization of
cuticle. Juvenile hormone mimics and antijuvenoids. Ecdysone mimics
as insecticides. The physiology of eclosion. hormone levels and
titres during molting and development.
Friday
laboratory/demonstration.
The
ligatured and topically treated insects from the previous week will be
evaluated and scored for effects of hormone analogs. Intermediate
stages of development will be discussed in the treated insects. Video
tape all of these results for future classes along with a dialog of
the results.
7. Neurosecretion
and "other" neurohormones.
The
difference between ordinary lipophilic hormones, and neurohormones.
Proctolin, diuretic hormone, allatostatin, egg development hormone,
pheromone biosynthesizing neurohormone hormone, pupariation
neurohormones, other neurohormones. Octopamine and neuromodulators.
8. The insect
nervous system.
Overall
anatomy. Ventral nerve cord. Peripheral vs. central nervous system.
The Autonomic nervous system. Ganglionic organization. The
perineurium. The neural lamella. The neuropile. The neuron and its
axon. The motor neuron. The interneuron. The sensory neuron. The
nervous impulse. The ionic basis of the nervous impulse.
Tetrodotoxin, mode of action. The mode of action of DDT.
9. Vision.
Fast
and slow eyes. The ERG. apposition, superposition and neural
superposition eyes, examples of each. Color vision. The color
spectrum. uv light detection. The plane of polarized light. visual
acuity. simple eyes. Function of ocelli. Function of stemmatae.
Extra-ocular light sensitivity, and possible functions.
Friday
laboratory/demonstration.
Examination of the different insect eyes with dissection microscope.
Ask Mike Adams if he has any cobalt fills to show, or slides. Ask
Mike if he has any fluorescent nerves from Dushan Zitnan’s work to
show. Microscope demonstrations of insect nervous system. American
cockroach ventral nerve cord with hyperneural muscle and median
nerves, and lateral cardiac nerve cord. Students will be asked to
find and draw the nerves shown. Set up to take pictures with the
Nikon camera apparatus (or take computer pictures with our video
camera/television set-up). Use these results to form permanent
computer records. Update or replace them every year as preparations
improve.
See if
we can make some visuals of the Nick Strausfeld fly brain book, or the
protocerebral ganglion papers in JIP. See if Leo has some slides of
his autoradiography work.
10. Mid-term exam.
11.
Mechanoreception.
The
trichoid hair. Campaniform sensillae. Scolopidia and chordotonal
organs. Johnston's organ. Subgenual organs. Tympanal organs.
Detection of bat sonar and behavior.
12.
Chemoreception.
The
chemoreceptor, some structures. gustatory receptors. The labellar
hair. the tarsal chemoreceptor. The palps. Olfaction. Pheromones
and sexual attraction. Control of pheromone biosynthesis and control
of pheromone perception.
Friday
laboratory/demonstration.
Ask
mike to set up a locust leg preparation (or get some legs ourselves).
Have the students make the same preparations. Take notes of how many
preparations actually work, and the rate of rhythmic contraction.
Video tape everything. Mount some starved adult flies or moths, and
present the sugar to the tarsi on a filter paper to get the sugar
response. Or use both flies and moths. Make sure to have a control
with no sugar, or with a substance causing an aversion response.
Find a
film of the moth bat cry avoidance reaction. Record cricket singing
and look at the pattern on a sonogram. This might require an
oscilloscope display and photograph.
13. The synapse
and synaptic transmission.
The
neuromuscular junction, anatomy and function. Neurotransmitters.
Postsynaptic potentials. Fast and slow motor units. Inhibitory motor
neurons. The motor unit. Neuromodulators and examples. The DUM
neurons and the firefly light organs.
14. The central
synapse.
The
cholinergic synapse. Acetylcholine. The cercal-giant synapse. The
Deutocerebrum and antennal nerves, anatomy and function. Glomeruli.
15. Insect
muscles.
The
structure of insect muscles, examples. Fast and slow units again in
terms of muscle anatomy. Synchronous flight. Asynchronous flight and
fibrillar flight muscles. The locust jump, structure and function of
the grasshopper extensor tibia muscle during the jump. The cricket
song and fixed action patterns. Reflex postural tonus and the
function of peripheral inhibition.
Friday
laboratory/demonstration.
Asynchronous flight. This is going to take some preparation and
practice. Video tape preparations ahead of time if the preparations
don’t work. (Tom has some old films of flies flying. Set up a
demonstration dissection of the cercal-giant synapse. Find some
visuals of the giant axons/neurons. Stain some fresh nerve/muscle
preparations.
16. The
circulatory system.
The
hemolymph, composition of. Hemocytes, function of. Structure and
function of pumps and septae. Neurogenic versus myogenic hearts.
Nervous versus hormonal control of heartbeat, evidence. Tidal flow of
hemolymph.
17. The
respiratory system.
Tidal
flow of hemolymph, the respiratory part. The respiratory structures.
Control of spiracles. The respiratory part of the autonomic nervous
system. Gas exchange. Diffusion of gases. Respiratory quotients.
Carbon dioxide, solubility of. Discontinuous respiration.
Respiratory strategies of insects. Aquatic insects and respiratory
specializations. Insect hemoglobins.
18. Temperature.
Cold
blooded versus warm blooded and modern concepts. Behavioral
strategies to keep warm or cool. Temperature control of insect flight
muscles, Hernd Heinrich work. Forms of radiation and convection with
definitions. Adaptations to extremes of temperature. Antifreeze, the
need for and methods of producing. An introduction to heat shock
proteins.
Friday
laboratory/demonstration.
A
combination of heartbeat recording with cricket and cockroach hearts.
Thermoregulation demonstration using the Sphinx moth.
19. Nutrition.
20. Water balance.
The
need to conserve water. Repeat of cuticle waterproofing. Metabolic
water. Active accumulation of water. Absorption of water from the
atmosphere. Mode of action of boric acid. Elimination of water
during locust flight. Diuretic hormone. Rhodnius water dumping.
20. Nutrition.
Dietary
requirements. Essential amino acids. Vitamins. Fats.
Carbohydrates. Protein. Insect diets, sources of materials. Plant
proteins and fats versus animal proteins and fats. Definitions of
fats, fatty acids and wax.
21. Digestion.
The
alimentary canal of insects, comparative anatomy and specialized
functions. The salivary glands. The midgut, structure and function.
Goblet cells and columnar cells. Ion pumps. The major groups of
dietary materials such as cellulose and specializations to digest,
protein, lipids, carbohydrates. Trehalose and digestion. Fat
digestion.
22. Digestion.
Protein
digestion. Amino acid turnover. Recycling of ions. Krebs cycle
introduction. ATP sources.
23. Excretion.
Main
principles of excretion. Retention of water. Excretion of
nitrogenous wastes. Chemical properties of ammonia, urea and uric
acid. Uric acid equilibrium. Uric acid formation. Bicarbonate ion
equilibrium. Aquatic versus terrestrial environments and special
needs of each. Storage excretion and examples. "Yellow rain" and
other fables.
24. Reproduction.
Overview of insect reproduction including major strategies. Sexual
organs, male and female. Accessory glands. Complex reproduction.
Sexual reproduction. Sexual behavior. Reproduction of fleas and
other parasites. Reproduction in social insects. Ovaries, hormonal
control of. Hormonal control of reproduction. Reproduction in
mosquitoes. Vitellogenesis, control of.
25. Energetics and
metabolism.
Overview and summary. No details of metabolic pathways, but caloric
output for various substrates used for energy, and trade-offs for the
major fuel types, carbohydrate, lipid or proline. The energetics of
insect flight muscle and lack of oxygen debt. Strategies to get
airborne and stay there.
26. Diapause.
An
adaptation to extremes of environment. The physiology of diapause.
Physiological triggers and components modulating diapause.
27. Review or
introduce hormonal control of insect behavior, or guest lecturers.
There
are usually 29 lecture days in a given spring quarter. With two days
used for mid-term exams, that leaves 27 days for lectures.
Email addresses.
The
course instructors will have email addresses that are listed on the
homepage of the Department. In the blanks provided below, write the
appropriate information for all instructors and TAs for future
reference.
Instructor 1
Name:
______________________
Office
hours: _________________
Email:
______________________
Phone:
______________________
Message: ____________________
Instructor 2
Name:
______________________
Office
hours: _________________
Email:
______________________
Phone:
______________________
Message: ____________________
Instructor 3
Name:
______________________
Office
hours: _________________
Email:
______________________
Phone:
______________________
Message: ____________________
Bulletin Board:
A class
Bulletin Board has been established on the internet at:
[_________________] (write the code name in the space provide) during
the term when the course is offered. Students may post questions or
answers to questions, discussions about the class and answers to
questions from the instructors as well as from others who may access
the Bulletin Board. Exam hints will be posted as well as other class
news.
If
participation in the Bulletin Board is required by the class, it will
be announced near the start of the quarter.
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