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Beetle fights bass in mouthwash duel.


A whirligig beetle whirligig beetle: see water beetle.  seeps white goo when pestered, and that slow ooze--instead of a big squirt--gives the beetle a chance in a life-or-death contest inside a fish's mouth, say Cornell University researchers.

When a largemouth black bass gets a mouthful of beetle, the fish doesn't swallow immediately, report Thomas Eisner and Daniel J. Aneshansley. Instead, the bass starts flushing water through its mouth, spits out the beetle for a few seconds, and then snaps it up and sloshes it around in more water, as if trying to rinse off a vile taste.

If the whirligig beetle Dineutes hornii makes its precious slime supply last until the fish gives up rinsing, the beetle swims away free. If the slime runs out, however, the fish wins dinner.

The researchers analyze the goo-versus-swish struggle in an article scheduled for the Oct. 10 PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, usually referred to as PNAS, is the official journal of the United States National Academy of Sciences. .

Accounts of oral-flushing fish have popped up sporadically, but Eisner and Aneshansley propose that the strategy may be more common than reported. Likewise, they suggest that the beetle's slow doling out of repellant could be a common defense in small water creatures.

Whirligig beetles skitter skit·ter  
v. skit·tered, skit·ter·ing, skit·ters

v.intr.
1. To move rapidly along a surface, usually with frequent light contacts or changes of direction; skip or glide quickly:
 in swirls along water surfaces worldwide. Compared with long-legged water striders, whirligigs have stubby bodies and short legs.

Two glands at the beetle's rear secrete goo, which Eisner describes as looking like yogurt. The glop gets its punch from gyrinidal, a terpene terpene /ter·pene/ (ter´pen) any hydrocarbon of the formula C10H16.

ter·pene
n.
Any of various unsaturated hydrocarbons in essential oils and certain resins of plants and used in organic
 hydrocarbon like such powerful scents as camphor camphor (kăm`fər), C10H16O, white, crystalline solid ketone with a characteristic pungent odor and taste. It melts at 176°C; and boils at 204°C;.  and menthol menthol, white crystalline substance with a characteristic pungent odor. It is derived from the oil of the peppermint plant, Mentha piperita (see mint), or prepared synthetically from coal tar. .

Working in a laboratory with wild-caught bass, the researchers checked the repellant's power. They inserted whirligigs randomly in a series of mealworms, and the bass ate all 197 mealworms but only 3 of 96 beetles offered.

When researchers smeared mealworms with beetle glands, the fish went into a frenzy of mouth flushing before swallowing.

The hungrier the fish, the longer it worked to rinse tainted mealworms. A bass midway through feeding typically devoted 1.3 minutes to a washing. That's not quite as long as a beetle typically sustained its discharge--1.5 minutes.

"Each is attuned at·tune  
tr.v. at·tuned, at·tun·ing, at·tunes
1. To bring into a harmonious or responsive relationship: an industry that is not attuned to market demands.

2.
 to the law of averages," Eisner concludes.

Scientists haven't much explored the possibility of a bad-taste defense by water insects, comments J. David Allan of the University of Michigan (body, education) University of Michigan - A large cosmopolitan university in the Midwest USA. Over 50000 students are enrolled at the University of Michigan's three campuses. The students come from 50 states and over 100 foreign countries.  in Ann Arbor. "The demonstration of this role in whirligig beetles is exciting," he says. More familiar strategies among aquatic insects include hiding during the day or when a fishy scent drifts by, but defense by bad taste is well known among terrestrial insects, he adds.

The argument for the beetle's dribbling chemical defense "makes perfectly good sense," comments Todd Crowl of Utah State University Utah State University, mainly at Logan; coeducational; land-grant and state supported; chartered 1888, opened 1890. It publishes Utah Science, Western Historical Quarterly, and Western American Literary Journal.  in Logan. During the past decade, he says, scientists interested in the chemistry of danger underwater have revealed "a whole lot of elaborate chemical signaling going back and forth," he says.
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Title Annotation:whirligig beetle
Author:Milius, S.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Oct 7, 2000
Words:463
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