All posts tagged: insect

Green insect turns a puzzling shade of hot pink

Green insect turns a puzzling shade of hot pink

Get the Popular Science daily newsletter💡 Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent six days a week. In the pitch black hours nearing midnight last March on Barro Colorado Island in Panama, a team of scientists came across a startling discovery: a hot pink leaf-masquerading katydid (Arota festae), striking a pose in the glow of a research station light.  Leaf-masquerading katydids are camouflage insects that usually resemble green leaves to ward off predators. Pink ones are a rarity among the rainforest-dwelling species, so the researchers kept the adult female bug under observation. Eleven days later, she was green.  Leaf-masquerading katydids in Panama’s tropical forests typically mimic green leaves. Image: University of St Andrews, University of Reading, the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, and University of Amsterdam. Researchers say it’s the first time a katydid has been observed completing a full color shift within a single adult life stage. Previously, scientists considered pink katydids to be rare, disadvantageous mutants.   The team that found this color-changing insect believes that its hot pink-to-green transformation could have evolved to mimic …

Color-coded mosquitoes safely enables male-only releases to combat Dengue and Zika

Color-coded mosquitoes safely enables male-only releases to combat Dengue and Zika

Across much of the world, a tiny striped insect shapes whether families stay healthy or get sick. The Asian tiger mosquito carries Dengue, Zika and Chikungunya, and traditional control efforts often struggle to keep up. A new genetic trick that literally changes how these mosquitoes look could help tip the balance in your favor. Why Separating Mosquito Sexes Matters Only female mosquitoes bite and pass on viruses. Males drink nectar, not blood. Many modern control programs release large numbers of males that are sterile or carry a trait that reduces survival in the next generation. When those males mate with wild females, fewer disease-carrying offspring survive. There is one big catch. These programs must release only males. If too many females slip through, they will still bite, still spread disease and may even weaken the program. Today, most facilities separate sexes by size during the pupal stage. That work is tedious, hard to automate and far from perfect. Characterization of the yellow mutant phenotype. (CREDIT: Nature Communications) Researchers led by Doron Zaada and Prof. Philippos …