TL;DR: The larva, which feeds on groundsel and ragwort, has a black and yellow warning coloration and is rejected by many birds, mammals, reptiles and amphibians; it is, however, preyed upon by various arthropods.
Abstract: Callimorpha jacobaeae L. (the cinnabar moth) has a brilliant red and blackish warning coloration (aposematic), and is a day-flying moth known to be unacceptable to a wide variety of vertebrate predators1–3. The larva, which feeds on groundsel (Senecio vulgaris L.) and ragwort (Senecio jacobaeae L.), has a black and yellow warning coloration and is rejected by many birds, mammals, reptiles and amphibians; it is, however, preyed upon by various arthropods4. When roughly handled the imago ejects or leaks out a pungent secretion mixed with yellow haemolymph from its prothoracic glands5. The adult moth contains a remarkably high level of histamine in its body tissues (700 µg/g)—a substance frequently associated with poison glands in invertebrates6–8.
TL;DR: The results suggest that climatic selection pressures involving non-visual differences in fitness account for the geographical variation of Callimorpha quadripunctaria in SW England.
Abstract: Callimorpha quadripunctaria (Lepidoptera, Arctiidae) is both genetically polymorphic for hindwing colour and well protected from predators. Polymorphic populations are, however, only found in the extreme northwest of its extensive distribution in Europe and Asia Minor. Use of a colour analyser confirmed the existence of three reasonably discrete colour classes: bright red, orange and yellow. These could each be subdivided into two further groupings of phenotypes, one of moths of pure colour and the other with a secondary colour. The species is polymorphic in SW England, where it became well established in villages and towns around the Exe estuary in the late 19th century. It now extends about 30 km east and west along the south coast of Devon and up to a similar distance inland along the river valleys. The rate of spread is consistent with the substantial dispersal of up to 500 m detected in a capture-recapture experiment performed at Exeter over the whole flight period in August 1984. This experiment also found no differences in timing of emergence, survivorship or within-habitat movement between the sexes or the colour classes. Males may show a higher rate of emigration than females. The species is polymorphic throughout S Devon. Its stronghold to the west of the Exe basin is characterized by a comparatively uniform morph frequency with 5045% red, 20–40% orange and 10–20% yellow. Yellow moths have their highest frequency in this area, red moths in the east and west and orange to the north. Adult activity is concentrated in the 2–3 h after dusk. Air temperatures of higher than 15°C are probably critical to pairing which involves sex pheromones released by females. This may be an important factor limiting the species' range. Our results suggest that climatic selection pressures involving non-visual differences in fitness account for the geographical variation. The lack of daytime activity of moths in comparison to that found by other workers on Rhodes and which is likely in other warmer climates suggests the hypothesis that expression of the polymorphism is favoured in the marginal populations of NW Europe by a relaxation of the stabilizing influence on the warning coloration exerted by visual predators.
TL;DR: Two new alkamides, 8,11-dihydroxy-dodeca-2E,4E,9E-triensaureisobutylamid (Compound 1) and 7-hydroxy-trideca-8E,8E-dien-10,12-diynoic acid isobutyamide (compound 2), as well as eight known compounds were isolated from the whole plants of Spilanthes callimorpha as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: Two new alkamides, 8,11-dihydroxy-dodeca-2E,4E,9E-triensaureisobutylamid (Compound 1) and 7-hydroxy-trideca-2E,8E-dien-10,12-diynoic acid isobutylamide (Compound 2), as well as eight known compounds were isolated from the whole plants of Spilanthes callimorpha. The structures of the alkamides were characterized on the basis of their spectral data.
TL;DR: Allele frequencies in the polymorphic populations of the geographically peripheral and ecologically marginal region of southwest England are inferred from data on phenotype frequencies, which show high frequencies of each allele at the two loci with some evidence of clines within the region.
Abstract: The colour polymorphism in the warningly-coloured moth Callimorpha quadripunctaria (Lepidoptera: Arctiidae) involves three major phenotypes with bright red, orange or yellow hindwings. These are controlled by two unlinked gene loci, each with a pair of alleles exhibiting complete dominance. One locus, when homozygous recessive, is epistatic to the other. Allele frequencies in the polymorphic populations of the geographically peripheral and ecologically marginal region of southwest England are inferred from data on phenotype frequencies. These populations show high frequencies of each allele at the two loci with some evidence of clines within the region.
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the sex pheromones released by females of the Scarlet Tiger Moth,Callimorpha dominula L., and the Cinnabar Moths,Tyria jacobaeae L., have similar activities and elute at the same retention time on analysis by coupled gas chromatography-electrophysiology with males from each species.
Abstract: It has been suggested that a common sex pheromone composition may account for interspecific sexual interactions observed with certain moths in the Arctiidae. In this study, it is demonstrated that the sex pheromones released by females of the Scarlet Tiger Moth,Callimorpha dominula L., and the Cinnabar Moth,Tyria jacobaeae L., have similar activities and elute at the same retention time on analysis by coupled gas chromatography (GC)-electrophysiology with males from each species. Peak enhancement on GC, chiral GC and coupled GC-mass spectrometry using authentic compounds show that the sex pheromone for bothC. dominula andT. jacobaeae is (3Z,6Z,9S,10R)-9,10-epoxyheneicosa-3,6-diene.