Field of Science

The Overall Scale

Scale insects have been the subjects of posts here twice before: in the first, I described their remarkable development, and in the second, I referred to the unusual genetics of some species. An appropriate next subject would, I suppose, be some of the ecological connections between scales and other animals.

Cochineal insects Dactylopius coccus on prickly pear, photographed by Joan Mundani.


Which starts, of course, with connections between scales and ourselves. Many scales are known as agricultural and horticultural pests, such as the red scale Aonidiella aurantii that attacks citrus. However, some scale species are not only welcomed but even deliberately cultivated due to commercial usage of the resins that they secrete. The two most significant commercial scales are the cochineal insects of the genus Dactylopius and the lac insect Kerria lacca. Other scale insects have also been used to produce similar products to those extracted from these species. Cochineal insects live on prickly pears, and produce carminic acid to ward off insect predators (though one predator, the caterpillar Laetilia coccidovora, is not only immune to the acid but stores it up to regurtitate at its own predators: Grimaldi & Engel 2005). Humans, on the other hand, are undeterred by carminic acid. The insects are collected, crushed, and the carminic acid extracted to produce the red dye cochineal, used (among other things) to give colour to food, or to dye fabric. It was an ill-fated attempt to establish a cochineal industry in Queensland that lead to the introduction of prickly pears to Australia: the plague-proportion spread of the prickly pears and their subsequent control by the moth Cactoblastis cactorum has become one of the textbook examples of biological pest control.

Branch covered with sticklac, produced by lac insects Kerria lacca, photographed by Jeffrey W. Lotz.


Lac insects produce a hard resinous shell for protection that, again, is their undoing in the eyes of humans. Sticklac, the twigs of trees covered by lac bugs, is harvested, then heated in canvas tubes. The resin melts and runs out through the canvas, leaving the wood and remaining insect parts behind. The resin is then processed to make the lacquer shellac. As a varnish, shellac has been mostly superseded by synthetic products, though it still has its afficionados. It is also used in the food industry to produce a shiny coating for confectionary or fruit.

Mating pair of the ant Acropyga epedana, photographed by Alex Wild. The queen is carrying the mealybug which while found the stockline for her new colony.


The use of scale products by humans has a long history. The Indian epic Mahabharata, believed written about the 8th century BC, describes the Lakshagriha, a highly flammable palace built by the Kaurava family out of shellac, jute and ghee in which they hoped to trap their enemies of the Pandava family (the Pandavas escaped through a tunnel when the palace burnt after having been warned by their uncle, though one wonders if the smell of ghee in the walls might have also aroused their suspicions). However, ants have been exploiting scale products for at least 40 million years, and probably much longer. Ants (like many other animals) are interested in scales for their honeydew, the excreted sugary waste from their sap diet. Ants not only collect the honeydew, they protect the scales from other insects and may carry them to fresher growth or more protected sites. Ants of the genus Acropyga are so dependent on mealybugs, waxy scale insects of the family Pseudococcidae, that when a young queen leaves her parent nest to mate, she will carry a mealybug with her so that her new colony can maintain its own stock. She even mates while holding on to it, as seen in the photo above. Acropyga queens have even been found preserved in Dominican amber, still carrying their mealybugs (Grimaldi & Engel 2005).

REFERENCE

Grimaldi, D., & M. S. Engel. 2005. Evolution of the Insects. Cambridge University Press.

Gordians

Long-term followers of this site may recall this video, linked to over four years ago:


The animal emerging from the unfortunate cricket in the video is a Gordian or horsehair worm, Nematomorpha. Gordian worms spend most of their lives as internal parasites: either of insects (in the freshwater/terrestrial order Gordiida) or of shrimps and crabs (in the marine genus Nectonema). Of the two commonly used vernacular names for this group, 'Gordian worm' refers to the famed Gordian knot, and is derived from the appearance of mating tangles of these elongate animals. 'Horsehair worm' refers to the long-held belief (again, inspired by appearance) that the adult worms developed from horse hairs decaying in water. So persistent was this belief that Leidy felt compelled to report in 1870 on an attempt to generate horsehair worms by this method, explaining that, "I need hardly say that I looked at my horse-hairs for many months without having had the opportunity of seeing their vivification". He also scuttled the fear, which even Linnaeus had reported as fact, that a horsehair worm could inflict a nasty bite on anyone careless enough to handle one. In fact, Gordian worms (being internal parasites absorbing nutrients directly from the host when young and not feeding as adults) do not even possess a mouth. Instead, the males of many species possess a bifurcated tail end, used in copulation, that may have been mistaken for jaws. The complete absence of active feeding has the interesting side effect that adult Gordians may completely lack an internal bacterial flora (Hudson & Floate 2009).

Representative nematomorphs: Gordius (Gordiida) on the left and Nectonema on the right, from Biodidac.


The primary division within the Nematomorpha between the marine Nectonema and the terrestrial Gordiida is universally agreed upon. The two branches are ecologically, morphologically and molecularly divergent (Bleidorn et al. 2002). Adults of Nectonema have dorsal and ventral double rows of swimming bristles, while those of Gordiida lack bristles (except for, in some species, minute patches of bristles in front of the cloacal opening). Mature adults of Gordiida emerge from their insect host when the latter approaches or enters water. It has been suggested that the worm is able to cause its host to actively seek out water, but it seems more likely that the worm simply causes erratic but non-directional behaviour that may make the host more likely to come into contact with water than if it had remained in its preferred microhabitat (Thomas et al. 2002). Once the host does come close to water as a result of random movement, the worm may be able to induce a last suicidal jump; alternatively, it may simply be that the addled host does not recognise the water as dangerous and makes no attempt to avoid it.

Female Chordodes wrapped around a stick, laying a white egg string. Photo from the Hairworm Biodiversity Survey.


Once in the water, the adult Gordians will mate with any others present; when multiple adults emerge in close proximity, they may begin mating before they have even finished emerging from their host (Hanelt & Janovy 2004). The females lay their eggs in long strings: one female may lay nearly six million eggs, making them one of the potentially most fecund animals on the planet. The larvae that hatch from the eggs look nothing like their parents, being kind of sausage-shaped with an eversible, spiny proboscis. A larva will find itself an aquatic animal host such as an insect larva or mollusc to burrow into and form a cyst. If the aquatic secondary host is then eaten by a suitable terrestrial primary host (for instance, after an aquatic insect larva matures into a terrestrial adult), the cyst will hatch out and the Gordian will complete its development within the terrestrial host. The Gordian larva may also bypass the secondary host if a primary host drinks water containing Gordian larvae. The larva or mode of transmission of Nectonema remains unknown,but, as Nectonema adults live in the same habitat as their primary host, they probably do not require a secondary host.

Larva of Chordodes encased in a cyst, from the Hairworm Biodiversity Survey.


Phylogenetically, Gordians have usually been regarded as related to nematodes, with which they share a number of morphological features. However, a molecular analysis by Sørensen et al. (2008) suggested a relationship between Gordians and loriciferans (albeit with support that was not overwhelming). The Gordian larva (which has no equivalent in the direct-developing nematode life-cycle) does bear a vague resemblance to an adult loriciferan, though it is debatable whether the resemblance is more than superficial. Loriciferans have not appeared in many phylogenetic analyses to date, and further investigation is required to establish whether it is the adults or the larvae of the Gordians that hold the clues to their affinities.

REFERENCES

Bleidorn, C., A. Schmidt-Rhaesa & J. R. Garey. 2002. Systematic relationships of Nematomorpha based on molecular and morphological data. Invertebrate Biology 121 (4): 357-364.

Hanelt, B., & J. Janovy Jr. 2004. Untying a Gordian knot: the domestication and laboratory maintenance of a Gordian worm, Paragordius varius (Nematomorpha: Gordiida). Journal of Natural History 38: 939-950.

Hudson, A. J., & K. D. Floate. 2009. Further evidence for the absence of bacteria in horsehair worms (Nematomorpha: Gordiidae). Journal of Parasitology 95 (6): 1545-1547.

Leidy, J. 1870. The gordius, or hair-worm. The American Entomologist and Botanist 2 (7): 193-197.

Sørensen, M. V., M. B. Hebsgaard, I. Heiner, H. Glenner, E. Willerslev & R. M. Kristensen. 2008. New data from an enigmatic phylum: evidence from molecular sequence data supports a sister-group relationship between Loricifera and Nematomorpha. Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research 46 (3): 231-239.

Thomas, F., A. Schmidt-Rhaesa, G. Martin, C. Manu, P. Durand & F. Renaud. 2002. Do hairworms (Nematomorpha) manipulate the water seeking behaviour of their terrestrial hosts? Journal of Evolutionary Biology 15 (3): 356-361.