首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Cardenolide content and thin-layer chromatography profiles of monarch butterflies,danaus plexippus L., and their larval host-plant milkweed,asclepias viridis walt., in northwestern louisiana
Authors:Steven P Lynch  Ronald A Martin
Affiliation:(1) Department of Biological Sciences, Louisiana State University, 71115 Shreveport, Louisiana;(2) Department of Chemistry, Louisiana State University, 71115 Shreveport, Louisiana
Abstract:This paper is the first in a series on cardenolide fingerprinting of monarch butterflies and their host-plant milkweeds in the eastern United States. Spectrophotometric determinations of the gross cardenolide content of 60Asclepias viridis plants in northwestern Louisiana indicate a positively skewed variation ranging from 95 to 432 ugrg/0.1 g dry weight with a mean of 245 ugrg/0.1 g. Butterflies reared individually on these plants contained a normal cardenolide distribution ranging from 73 to 591 ugrg/0.1 g dry weight with a mean of 337 ugrg/0.1 g. The uptake of cardenolide by the butterflies best fit a logarithmic function of the plant concentration. Female monarchs (385 ugrg/0.l g) contained significantly greater mean cardenolide concentrations than did males (287 ugrg/0.1 g). No indications of a metabolic cost for either cardenolide ingestion or storage were adduced from size or dry weight data. Thin-layer chromatograms of 24 individual plant-butterfly pairs developed in two solvent systems resolved 21 individual spots in the plants and 15 in the butterflies.A. viridis plants appear to contain several relatively nonpolar cardenolides of the calotropagenin series which are metabolized to the more polar 3'-hydroxy derivatives calactin and calotropin as well as to calotropagenin in the butterflies. The epoxy cardenolides labriformin and labriformidin were absent, although desglucosyrioside (a 3'-hydroxy derivative) appeared present in both plants and butterflies. Quantitative evaluation of theR f values, spot intensities, and probabilities of occurrence in the chloroform-methanol—formamide TLC system produced a cardenolide fingerprint clearly distinct from those previously established for monarchs reared on otherAsclepias species, supporting the use of fingerprints to make ecological predictions concerning larval host-plant utilization.A. viridis is the predominant early spring milkweed throughout most of the south central United States and may be important in providing chemical protection to spring and early summer generation monarchs in the eastern United States.Lepidoptera: Danaidae.Apocynales: Asclepiadaceae.
Keywords:Asclepias viridis  milkweed  Asclepiadaceae  Danaus plexippus  Lepidoptera  Danaidae  monarch butterfly  cardenolide  cardiac glyco-side  gitoxin  emical ecology  emical defense  in-layer chromatog-raphy  ant-insect interactions  evolution
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号