Since the new post on non-vascular plants and ferns has been delayed, I thought I’d put together a brief collection of the most interesting science news that has come across my desk this week.
“Predatory beetles eavesdrop on ants’ chemical conversations to find best egg-laying sites“
There is a complicated relationship between ants (Azteca instabilis), scale insects (Coccus viridis), lady beetles (Azya orbigera), and phorid flies (Pseudacteon laciniosus) on the coffee plants in Mexico. The ants protect the scale insects from predators so that they can ‘farm’ their honeydew (the sugar dense liquid that aphids and some scale insects produce when they feed on plant sap). Because the ants are protective, large quantities of scale insects can be found in these ant run farms on coffee plants. Scale eating coccinellids, or lady beetles, would be killed by the ants as adults, but their larvae, who also appreciate a scale meal, are covered in sticky, waxy, filaments that protect them from ants. Finding oneself born in a scale farm would mean an important, and easy, first meal for a lady beetle larva.

An ant having a sticky encounter with a lady beetle larvae. Photo by Ivette Perfecto from the University of Michigan press release.
Even though the larvae may be protected, the female lady beetle still has to arrive in ant guarded territory to lay her eggs somewhere the ants won’t immediately find them (sometimes she’ll even lay them underneath scale insects). As seen in the video above, getting around the ants is a challenge, but worth it, if it means giving her offspring the best start to life (an open buffet).
Enter the phorid flies. The ants themselves are not immune to predation, and for them, the parasitic phorid flies are the stuff of nightmares. Phorid flies attack ants and lay their eggs in them, while the ants are still alive. The larvae develop within the ant until eventually the ant is decapitated when the fly is ready to emerge. It seems that phorid flies require a moving target though, in order to know that their future ‘baby sitters’ are alive and ready to be hosts. Because of this, the ants have developed a simple strategy – they freeze when phorid flies are around.
When a fly attack begins, the ants release a very specific pheromone that tells the entire colony to stop moving. In turns out, female lady beetles have learned to recognize this fly attack pheromone so when they smell it, they know they have a clear window to come in and lay their eggs. This is especially interesting because it is one of the first examples of a non-ant picking up on those ant specific pheromones.
Hsun-Yi Hsieh, Heidi Liere, Estelí J. Soto, Ivette Perfecto1, “Cascading trait-mediated interactions induced by ant pheromones”, Ecology and Evolution, published online: 27 JUL 2012. DOI: 10.1002/ece3.322
“Birds that live with varying weather sing more versatile songs“

Cardinalis sinuatus, the Desert Cardinal, one of the song birds studied. Their songs change in volume and tempo with changing seasonal precipitation averages. Photo © by Motorrad67 Source: Wikimedia commons, Uploader: Motorrad-67 [link]
Co-author, Clinton D. Francis, said:
Sound transmits differently through different vegetation types. Often when birds arrive at their breeding grounds in the spring, for example, there are hardly any leaves on the trees. Over the course of just a couple of weeks, the sound transmission changes drastically as the leaves come in.
Iliana Medina, the other co-author of the study, added:
Birds that have more flexibility in their songs may be better able to cope with the different acoustic environments they experience throughout the year.
And this would make sense, given that a song that would be ‘successful’ (reproductively speaking) at one time of the year, say in the winter or during drought times in a bare field, might sound quite different being sung during a lush spring.
Iliana Medina and Clinton D. Francis, “Environmental variability and acoustic signals: a multi-level approach in songbirds”, Biology Letters, Published online August 1, 2012, doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2012.0522
Wasps and Hornets Start the Wine Making Process (Seriously)

Vespa crabro, the European Hornet, plays an important role in wine making as an early yeast bringer. Source: Wikimedia Commons, User: PiccoloNamek. Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported. [link]
Paper wasps and European hornets feed on grapes - Vespa crabro, common in the Mediterranean and Southern Europe, apparently has a mouth particularly well designed for breaking the skin of grapes. When they feed, they leave behind Saccharomyces cerevisiae from their gut, otherwise known as brewer’s yeast. Since wasp and hornet mouth parts are so small, a little bite doesn’t stop the grape from being harvestable, but it does start the fermentation process, ever so slightly, while the grape is still on the vine. Wine from different regions tastes differently, not just because grape varieties and growing conditions are different, but because the local yeast strains are different. Now it seems that not only ambient and added yeast affect the flavour, but the gut flora of the local insects play a role too. Wine made from grapes that have had fermentation begin while still on the wine will taste differently than wine made from grapes where fermentation begins later. Wasps and hornets, as much as we sometimes try to keep them out of our spaces, help give wine their flavour.
Anyone growing their own grapes from home wine making might not want to discourage wasp activity in their yard.
I thoroughly enjoyed reading each of these!
Thanks for the visit…I’m going to have to come back. I’d have left a comment on your about page, but couldn’t find where. We’ve got some food allergies at my place and I’m finding process foods are less appealing. Thanks for making science fun.
Awesome, awesome, awesome!!! The piece on wasps and hornets aiding in fermentation just rocked my world. Thanks for posting!
Mine too! That was such a novel concept for me, I loved it.
Interestingly unbeatable !
fascinating stories, how wonderful nature is!
Interesting everything. About the wasps though…isn’t that similar to figs. I forget which insect it is, but they have to go inside the fig to pollinate it. Of course when I was younger I thought that was gross. But then nature is fascinating.
Yes, the fig wasp has to enter the fig to mate and leave their eggs (and pollinate the fig so it can develop seeds). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fig_wasp Most people probably don’t want to know they’re eating both seed, and wasp, when they bite into a delicious fig.
Just close your eyes and think chocolate covered ants… *giggle*
There is so much processed food that we often forget it was ‘natural’ first.
Also aren’t some medications made from what could be consider poisons (if ingested without being processed) found inside peach and other fruit pits. Aspirin from the bark of the willow tree. Penicillin is made from mold, but you don’t want to just eat mold either! So much we don’t know. Thanks again.
As a budding biology student, I found this post fascinating. Your writing style makes these scientific tidbits easy to read and understand. Thanks!
Hi, just wanted to let you know I’ve nominated you for the One Lovely Blog Award.
http://gnomelandgardens.wordpress.com/2012/08/05/one-lovely-blog-award/
I know it’s kinda like a chain letter so no pressure to actually take part, but please know your work is appreciated!
Interesting articles! The wasp and wine connection especially fascinating. I’ll be looking at wasps a little differently now!
The world is far more complicated than we first thought. And the story linking ants, beetles, aphids and phorid flies is just an example of how interconnected the world actually is. Fascinating!
Fascinating stuff. Thank you for the read!
I have often wondered if wasps truly had a purpose in this world besides stinging me and making me swell up like a pumpkin…now I know they also contribute to relieving the pain! Wasps and wine! Who knew?! Thank you!
Paper wasps are wonderful to have around if you have caterpillar problems too – they’re predatory, and take caterpillar and other pests off to feed their young.
That’s good to know. I almost lost a tree this year to bag worms! I will take better care of my wasp friends from now on. Thank you!
Great stuff, again. I’m certainly looking forward to your primitive plant posting, having so many primitive plants. Thanks!
You make it so easy to understand how things work in nature.
Thank you! That is really the greatest compliment someone like me can get.
Brilliant. Someone who can explain things for a non-scientist to get some understanding – and better still some enjoyment rather than confusion! Thank you!
Thank you so much. I am so glad that people are enjoying these!
Wow, I had no idea that wasps were in on the wine-making process.
As a complete aside, I’m nominating you for One Lovely Blogger Award! Should you wish to accept, please copy & paste the award from my site and follow the rules described in my latest post.
Have a wonderful weekend!
The information about the beetles and ants was fascinating. Knowing things like that sort of gives the sense that everything makes sense in a bigger and more detailed way than we can ever know.
Very interesting, especially the wasps and hornets article. I know they are good guys for the garden, except when they eat my bees, but never thought that they help fermenting the grapes as well. Thanks for posting.
Hi, just letting you know I’ve notimated you for the “kreativ blogger award”. Congrats & well deserved!
http://harvestbeyondmyfrontdoor.wordpress.com/2012/10/20/creative-beautiful-and-sparkly/