Mynd:Milkweed - or oleander - aphid, Aphis nerii.jpg

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Lýsing
English: Another member of the milkweed zoo, the milkweed [or oleander] aphid protects itself with cardiac glycosides, just like the monarch, and several beetles and true bugs. Botanists put milkweed and oleander in the same family now, based on DNA evidence.

The oleander aphid (Aphis nerii Boyer de Fonscolombe) is a distinct bright yellow aphid with black legs, antennae, cauda (tail-like appendage), and cornicles (tubes that extend from the abdomen). It is thought to originate in the Mediterranean and probably spread as oleanders were introduced around the world. The aphid is now found in tropical and temperate zones worldwide.

When the oleander aphid finds its preferred hosts, plants in the Asclepiadaceae and Apocynaceae, the population explodes. All of the aphids are females; they reproduce by parthenogenesis (clones of the mother) and they bear live young (nymphs). If conditions become too crowded on a plant or the plant declines in health, some of the aphids develop wings and will colonize new plants.

The aphids' bright coloring is a warning to predators. The aphids sequester the cardenolides (cardiac glycosides) produced by the milkweeds and dogbanes. When a predator disturbs the aphids, they exude the cardenolides in a waxy compound through the cornicles. Predators usually back away and clean the defensive compound from their mouthparts.

The amount of cardenolides present in milkweeds and dogbanes varies with the species, the age of the plant, and the season. Aphids that feed on plants with low amounts of the glycosides are more likely to fall prey to generalist predators like spiders, ladybug larvae, and aphid lions (lacewing larvae).

Generalist predators that survive eating the oleander aphids suffer the effects of the cardenolides. Fewer aphid lions survive to become lacewings and reproduce. Ladybugs develop deformed wings. And spiders weave strange disrupted webs.

The Bug Guide has posted a great photograph of oleander aphids taken by Lynette Schimming. To view these aphids on a milkweed, click on the link: bugguide.net/node/view/10569/bgpage
Dagsetning
Uppruni Milkweed aphid, Aphis nerii
Höfundarréttarhafi aroid from San Luis Obispo, CA, USA

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w:en:Creative Commons
tilvísun höfundarréttar
This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license.
Þér er frjálst:
  • að deila – að afrita, deila og yfirfæra verkið
  • að blanda – að breyta verkinu
Undir eftirfarandi skilmálum:
  • tilvísun höfundarréttar – Þú verður að tilgreina viðurkenningu á höfundarréttindum, gefa upp tengil á notkunarleyfið og gefa til kynna ef breytingar hafa verið gerðar. Þú getur gert þetta á einhvern ásættanlegan máta, en ekki á nokkurn þann hátt sem bendi til þess að leyfisveitandinn styðji þig eða notkun þína á verkinu.
This image was originally posted to Flickr by aroid at https://www.flickr.com/photos/60546721@N00/260003978. It was reviewed on 16. júlí 2009 by FlickreviewR and was confirmed to be licensed under the terms of the cc-by-2.0.

16. júlí 2009

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núverandi16. júlí 2009 kl. 13:01Smámynd útgáfunnar frá 16. júlí 2009, kl. 13:01800 × 770 (89 KB)Jacopo Werther{{Information |Description= Another member of the milkweed zoo, the milkweed [or oleander] aphid protects itself with cardiac glycosides, just like the monarch, and several beetles and true bugs. Botanists put milkweed and oleander in the same family now,

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