Misanthropy at its best
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Original: 1/28/2007 3:55 AM
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Sunday, January 28, 2007

The Most Interesting thing I Learned This Week

 (from Wikipedia.)

The emerald cockroach wasp (Ampulex compressa, also known as the jewel wasp) is a parasitoid wasp of the family Ampulicidae. It is known for its reproductive behavior, which involves using a live cockroach (specificially a Periplaneta americana) as a host for its larva. A number of other venomous animals which use live food for their larvae paralyze their prey. Unlike them, Ampulex compressa initially leaves the cockroach mobile, but modifies its behaviour in a unique way.

As early as the 1940s it was published that wasps of this species sting a roach twice, which modifies the behavior of the prey. A recent study using radioactive labeling proved that the wasp stings precisely into specific ganglia. Ampulex compressa delivers an initial sting to a thoracic ganglion of a cockroach to mildly paralyze the front legs of the insect. This facilitates the second sting at a carefully chosen spot in the cockroach's head ganglia (brain), in the section that controls the escape reflex. As a result of this sting, the cockroach will now fail to produce normal escape responses.

The wasp, which is too small to carry the cockroach, then drives the victim to the wasp's den, by pulling one of the cockroach's antennae in a manner similar to a leash. Once they reach the den, the wasp lays an egg on the cockroach's abdomen and proceeds to fill in the den's entrance with pebbles, more to keep other predators out than to keep the cockroach in.

The stung cockroach, its escape reflex disabled, will simply rest in the den as the wasp's egg hatches. A hatched larva chews its way into the abdomen of the cockroach and proceeds to live as an endoparasitoid. Over a period of eight days, the wasp larva consumes the cockroach's internal organs in an order which guarantees that the cockroach will stay alive, at least until the larva enters the pupal stage and forms a cocoon inside the cockroach's body. After about four weeks, the fully-grown wasp will emerge from the cockroach's body to begin its adult life.

The wasp is common in tropical regions (Africa, India and the Pacific islands), and has been introduced to Hawaii by F. X. Williams in 1941 as a method of biocontrol. This was unsuccessful because of the territorial tendencies of the wasp, and the small scale on which they hunt.

 Posted 1/28/2007 3:55 AM - 70 views - 3 comments

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Visit werido85's Xanga Site!
whoa!  that's pretty crazy!
Posted 1/28/2007 4:40 PM by werido85 - reply

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When I hear about things like that, I just don't think that purely evolutionary explanations are possible.  What exactly is the in-between route between the wasp stinging the cockroach, and the wasp stinging the cockroach in the exact location to paralyze the front legs and disable the escape reflex and then moving the antenna to guide the cockroach back to its den?  How long would it take the "sting the cockroach in exactly these two pinpoint locations in this order every time" genes to develop and be selected for, and how long would it take the "put your front legs on the antenna and then use them like a steering wheel to direct the stung cockroach" genes to supplement them?  Not to mention the "eating the internal organs in the right order" genes, which almost seem natural in comparison.
Posted 1/29/2007 8:36 AM by dankster312 - reply

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Yeah, I agree with that. I get the same sense from Gordian Worms:

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=7226661303929118618
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nematomorpha

and Bombadier Beetles.
Posted 1/29/2007 1:17 PM by rhesuspieces00 - reply


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