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1 April 2011 Trail Marking by Caterpillars of the Silverspot Butterfly Dione Juno Huascuma
Alfonso Pescador-Rubio, Sergio G. Stanford-Camargo, Luis E Páez-Gerardo, Alberto J. Ramírez-Reyes, René A. Ibarra-Jiménez, Terrence D. Fitzgerald
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Abstract

A pheromone is implicated in the trail marking behavior of caterpillars of the nymphalid silverspot butterfly, Dione juno huascuma (Reakirt) (Lepidoptera: Heliconiinae) that feed gregariously on Passiflora (Malpighiales: Passifloraceae) vines in Mexico. Although they mark pathways leading from one feeding site to another with silk, this study shows that the silk was neither adequate nor necessary to elicit trail following behavior. Caterpillars marked trails with a long-lived pheromone that was deposited when they brushed the ventral surfaces of the tips of their abdomens along branch pathways. The caterpillars distinguished between pathways deposited by different numbers of siblings and between trails of different ages. Caterpillars also preferentially followed the trails of conspecifics over those of another nymphalid, Nymphalis antiopa L., the mourning cloak butterfly.

This is an open access paper. We use the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 license that permits unrestricted use, provided that the paper is properly attributed.
Alfonso Pescador-Rubio, Sergio G. Stanford-Camargo, Luis E Páez-Gerardo, Alberto J. Ramírez-Reyes, René A. Ibarra-Jiménez, and Terrence D. Fitzgerald "Trail Marking by Caterpillars of the Silverspot Butterfly Dione Juno Huascuma," Journal of Insect Science 11(55), 1-10, (1 April 2011). https://doi.org/10.1673/031.011.5501
Received: 15 February 2010; Accepted: 1 March 2011; Published: 1 April 2011
KEYWORDS
foraging behavior
nymphalidae
silk
social caterpillar
trail pheromone
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