Water is a critical resource for all terrestrial insects. The yellow-spined bamboo locust Ceracris kiangsu Tsai (Oedipodidae: Orthoptera), matures, copulates and reproduces in the summer and adults are observed mud-puddling in human urine-contaminated materials on hot days. Besides obtaining NaCl and NH 4 HCO 3 , the locust may also compensate for water deficiency. In a dual-choice test in the laboratory, adults prefer to remain on wet rather than dry filter paper at high temperature (36 • C). The females are more likely to move towards and stay on wet filter paper than males. The adults chew wet filter paper in the laboratory at higher temperature and the females consume more than the males. Moreover, foam plastic containing an aqueous solution of an insecticide, bisultap, results in greater mortality in females than a dry formulation, both in the laboratory and the field. The water content of the frass from males is significantly lower than that from females and may partially explain the stronger hygropreference behaviour in females. Other possible reasons for sexually different hygropreference are also discussed. The removal of the adult antennae substantially reduces discrimination between wet and dry filter paper and mortality resulting from wet bisultap formulations in the laboratory. Hence, antennae mediate, at least partially, hygropreference behaviour.
As the mixed education model gradually becomes widespread in various universities in Japan, the evaluation of the quality of IT English mixed education has become a very important issue, and it is worth considering the corresponding evaluation method. In this paper, we use a data mining algorithm to implement an evaluation method for the interconversion of quantitative data and qualitative concepts and use the IT English mixed teaching model to evaluate and analyze the teaching quality of the course. The evaluation method is feasible and provides a mixing method. Evaluation of the quality of education. Reference method.
Adults of the yellow-spined bamboo locust, Ceracris kiangsu Tsai (Orthoptera: Oedipodidae), aggregate and gnaw at human urine-contaminated materials, a phenomenon termed puddling. Several urine-borne chemicals, including NaCl, are known to stimulate adult C. kiangsu to consume filter paper. Because in nature C. kiangsu adults may use cues to locate puddling resources, we tested the influence of conspecific decoys (dried C. kiangsu) on foraging and consumption of 3% NaCl—treated filter paper. In a two—choice test experiment in the laboratory, female adults showed no preference for filter papers (not treated with NaCL) with or without decoys. In contrast, C. kiangsu females consumed significantly more NaCl—treated filter paper on which conspecific decoys were attached than those without decoys in both the laboratory and in a bamboo forest. When the bait was changed to 3% NaCl plus the insecticide bisultap, significantly more C. kiangsu were killed in the bamboo forest when decoys were present, however the results were not significant when the experiment was done in the laboratory. Hence, moving towards conspecifics seems to facilitate NaCl resource foraging in C. kiangsu, suggesting that the presence of conspecifics promotes feeding on puddling resources.
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