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Comparative Study
. 2000 Mar-Apr;73(2):219-30.
doi: 10.1086/316728.

Sterol metabolic constraints as a factor contributing to the maintenance of diet mixing in grasshoppers (Orthoptera: Acrididae)

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Comparative Study

Sterol metabolic constraints as a factor contributing to the maintenance of diet mixing in grasshoppers (Orthoptera: Acrididae)

S T Behmer et al. Physiol Biochem Zool. 2000 Mar-Apr.

Abstract

Sterols are essential nutrients for all arthropods, including grasshoppers, but metabolic constraints may limit which sterols can support normal growth and development. In the firsts part of this study, a comparative experiment, which included five different species of grasshoppers (Orthoptera: Acrididae) representing three separate taxonomic groups, was performed to determine how widespread sterol metabolic constraints are within the Acrididae. Grasshoppers were reared on artificial diets containing sterols that differed in the position of double bonds within the sterol structure, and various life history traits were measured. Sterols with double bonds at position 7, within the sterol nucleus, and/or at position 22, on the cholestane side chain, failed to support development to the adult stage for any of the five species. In addition, grasshoppers reared on sterols with these configurations often had extended developmental times and reduced growth rates in the first and second stadium compared with grasshoppers reared on sitosterol or cholesterol diets. In the second half of this study, we examined how mixtures of suitable and unsuitable sterols influenced survival, growth, and development. Artificial foods containing mixtures of suitable and unsuitable sterols were fed to the highly polyphagous grasshopper Schistocerca americana. Results suggest that survival and performance of this grasshopper suffer as the concentration of unsuitable sterols increases and as the ratio of suitable to unsuitable sterols in the diet decreases. We review the literature to document variation in plant sterol profiles and propose that constraints on sterol metabolism may contribute to the maintenance of diet mixing in the Acrididae.

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