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Acquired chemical defense in the lycaenid butterfly,Eumaeus atala
Authors:M. Deane Bowers  Zoia Larin
Affiliation:(1) Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University, 02138 Cambridge, Massachusetts;(2) Present address: Room 336, The Imperial Cancer Research Fund, Lincoln's Inn Fields, WC2A 3PX London, UK
Abstract:The lycaenid butterfly,Eumaeus atala, was found to contain cycasin, an azoxyglycoside, by thin-layer chromatography (TLC). Quantification of cycasin content in 10 individual freshly killed and frozen males and females, using capillary gas chromatography (GC), showed that cycasin contents of individual butterflies ranged from 0.21 to 0.51 mg (1.24–2.75% dry weight). A museum specimen ofE. atala of unknown age had undetectable amounts of cycasin by GC. GC showed that larval frass contained about 0.10% cycasin, which was not detectable by TLC. Cycasin in the host plant was not detectable by TLC but was detected by GC and found to be 0.02% dry weight. There was no macrozamin, another azoxyglycoside characteristic of many cycads, in the butterfly or plant. Feeding trials with a colony of the ant,Camponotus abdominalis floridanus, showed that both cycasin and the adult ofE. atala were deterrent to the ants.
Keywords:Cycasin  macrozamin  cycads  azoxyglycosides  Eumaeus atala  Lepidoptera  Lycaenidae  insect-plant interaction  chemical ecology  unpalatability  insect defense strategy  ants  Camponotus abdominalis floridanus
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