High disparity in repellent gland anatomy across major lineages of stick and leaf insects (Insecta: Phasmatodea)

Niekampf M, Meyer P, Quade FSC, Schmidt AR, Salditt T, Bradler S (2024)
BMC Zoology 9(1): 1.

Zeitschriftenaufsatz | Veröffentlicht | Englisch
 
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Autor*in
Niekampf, MarcoUniBi ; Meyer, Paul ; Quade, Felix S. C. ; Schmidt, Alexander R. ; Salditt, Tim ; Bradler, Sven
Abstract / Bemerkung
**Background**

Phasmatodea are well known for their ability to disguise themselves by mimicking twigs, leaves, or bark, and are therefore commonly referred to as stick and leaf insects. In addition to this and other defensive strategies, many phasmatodean species use paired prothoracic repellent glands to release defensive chemicals when disturbed by predators or parasites. These glands are considered as an autapomorphic trait of the Phasmatodea. However, detailed knowledge of the gland anatomy and chemical compounds is scarce and only a few species were studied until now. We investigated the repellent glands for a global sampling of stick and leaf insects that represents all major phasmatodean lineages morphologically via µCT scans and analyzed the anatomical traits in a phylogenetic context.

**Results**

All twelve investigated species possess prothoracic repellent glands that we classify into four distinct gland types. 1: lobe-like glands, 2: sac-like glands without ejaculatory duct, 3: sac-like glands with ejaculatory duct and 4: tube-like glands. Lobe-like glands are exclusively present in Timema , sac-like glands without ejaculatory duct are only found in Orthomeria , whereas the other two types are distributed across all other taxa (= Neophasmatodea). The relative size differences of these glands vary significantly between species, with some glands not exceeding in length the anterior quarter of the prothorax, and other glands extending to the end of the metathorax.

**Conclusions**

We could not detect any strong correlation between aposematic or cryptic coloration of the examined phasmatodeans and gland type or size. We hypothesize that a comparatively small gland was present in the last common ancestor of Phasmatodea and Euphasmatodea, and that the gland volume increased independently in subordinate lineages of the Occidophasmata and Oriophasmata. Alternatively, the stem species of Neophasmatodea already developed large glands that were reduced in size several times independently. In any case, our results indicate a convergent evolution of the gland types, which was probably closely linked to properties of the chemical components and different predator selection pressures. Our study is the first showing the great anatomical variability of repellent glands in stick and leaf insects.

Erscheinungsjahr
2024
Zeitschriftentitel
BMC Zoology
Band
9
Ausgabe
1
Art.-Nr.
1
eISSN
2056-3132
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/3017014

Zitieren

Niekampf M, Meyer P, Quade FSC, Schmidt AR, Salditt T, Bradler S. High disparity in repellent gland anatomy across major lineages of stick and leaf insects (Insecta: Phasmatodea). BMC Zoology. 2024;9(1): 1.
Niekampf, M., Meyer, P., Quade, F. S. C., Schmidt, A. R., Salditt, T., & Bradler, S. (2024). High disparity in repellent gland anatomy across major lineages of stick and leaf insects (Insecta: Phasmatodea). BMC Zoology, 9(1), 1. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40850-023-00189-2
Niekampf, Marco, Meyer, Paul, Quade, Felix S. C., Schmidt, Alexander R., Salditt, Tim, and Bradler, Sven. 2024. “High disparity in repellent gland anatomy across major lineages of stick and leaf insects (Insecta: Phasmatodea)”. BMC Zoology 9 (1): 1.
Niekampf, M., Meyer, P., Quade, F. S. C., Schmidt, A. R., Salditt, T., and Bradler, S. (2024). High disparity in repellent gland anatomy across major lineages of stick and leaf insects (Insecta: Phasmatodea). BMC Zoology 9:1.
Niekampf, M., et al., 2024. High disparity in repellent gland anatomy across major lineages of stick and leaf insects (Insecta: Phasmatodea). BMC Zoology, 9(1): 1.
M. Niekampf, et al., “High disparity in repellent gland anatomy across major lineages of stick and leaf insects (Insecta: Phasmatodea)”, BMC Zoology, vol. 9, 2024, : 1.
Niekampf, M., Meyer, P., Quade, F.S.C., Schmidt, A.R., Salditt, T., Bradler, S.: High disparity in repellent gland anatomy across major lineages of stick and leaf insects (Insecta: Phasmatodea). BMC Zoology. 9, : 1 (2024).
Niekampf, Marco, Meyer, Paul, Quade, Felix S. C., Schmidt, Alexander R., Salditt, Tim, and Bradler, Sven. “High disparity in repellent gland anatomy across major lineages of stick and leaf insects (Insecta: Phasmatodea)”. BMC Zoology 9.1 (2024): 1.
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2026-05-26T12:17:21Z
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