姜黄能缩短家蝇的寿命

IF 2.4 Q1 ENTOMOLOGY
Frontiers in insect science Pub Date : 2024-04-10 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.3389/finsc.2024.1376011
Sophie Laurie, Leah Ainslie, Sharon Mitchell, Juliano Morimoto
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引用次数: 0

摘要

随着虫害爆发的可能性不断增加,气候变化对粮食安全和全球公共卫生构成了重大威胁。控制昆虫数量需要替代方法,最好是使用环境友好型化合物。姜黄被认为是一种天然杀虫剂,对某些昆虫具有毒性。然而,姜黄对昆虫生存的影响及其与其他生态因素(如饮食)之间的相互作用的实证证据还很有限。在这里,我们测试了姜黄及其与不同蛋白质来源食物的相互作用对普通家蝇(Musca domestica)的影响。我们发现,姜黄缩短了昆虫的寿命,这与饮食和性别无关。姜黄食物中的雌蝇死亡时体重较重,这可能是由于雌蝇在一生中的体重损失率相对较低,而且死亡时含水量百分比较高。雌雄个体对日粮中蛋白质来源的反应不同,在蛋白质来源为水解酵母的日粮中,雌雄个体的寿命差异最大;在蔗糖牛奶日粮中,雌雄个体的寿命最长,而在水解酵母日粮中,雌雄个体的寿命最短。没有证据表明姜黄与饮食之间存在相互作用,这表明毒性效应与饮食中的蛋白质来源无关。鉴于文献中发现姜黄对昆虫和哺乳动物的影响似乎是相反的,我们的研究结果进一步证明姜黄是一种潜在的天然杀虫剂。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Turmeric shortens lifespan in houseflies.

Climate change poses a significant threat to food security and global public health with the increasing likelihood of insect pest outbreaks. Alternative ways to control insect populations, preferably using environmental-friendly compounds, are needed. Turmeric has been suggested as a natural insecticide with toxicity properties in some insect groups. However, empirical evidence of the effects of turmeric - and their interaction with other ecological factors such as diet - on insect survival has been limited. Here, we tested the effects of turmeric and its interactions with diets differing in protein source in the common housefly, Musca domestica. We found that turmeric shortened lifespan independent of diet and sex. Females in turmeric diets were heavier at death, which was likely driven by a combination of relatively lower rates of body mass loss during their lifetime and a higher percentage of water content at death. Each sex responded differently to the protein source in the diet, and the magnitude of the difference in lifespan between sexes were greatest in diets in which protein source was hydrolysed yeast; individuals from both sexes lived longest in sucrose-milk diets and shortest in diets with hydrolysed yeast. There was no evidence of an interaction between turmeric and diet, suggesting that the toxicity effects are independent of protein source in the diet. Given the seemingly opposing effects of turmeric in insects and mammals being uncovered in the literature, our findings provide further evidence in support of turmeric as a potential natural insecticide.

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