With the simulated heatwaves experiments well under way, and the behavioural experiments finally progressing, we can breathe a sigh of relief. Since Sofia Gigliotti joined us in April 2022, we have been so busy preparing experiments, sourcing caterpillars and setting up the field study, that this is my first post in four months and Sofia has left us! However, it is a sign that we have been working very hard to make our British Ecological Society-funded large project work.
Jamie Smith has been in charge of looking after the Pieris brassicae pupae. He has released them in their field enclosure and they have mated, produced eggs and the caterpillars have successfully hatched. He has then set up the simulated heatwave experiments and is attempting cross-matings between heated individuals and controls. Fingers crossed it works out! Meanwhile Electra is investigating the behavioural thermoregulation of caterpillars. Originally we were hoping to use large white (P. brassicae) too, but we had to source some new ones when the first batch died - I do wonder whether our heated diapause caused them physiological stress (see for example, this new work by Nielsen et al 2022 on Pieris napi). Electra has worked against all odds as two more batches of caterpillars did not make it! She is now working with a third batch sourced from the wild, and things are finally looking better.
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AuthorGraziella Iossa Archives
August 2023
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