Abstract

Intermittent food shortages are commonly encountered in the wild. During winter or starvation stress, mammals often choose to hibernate while insects—in the form of eggs, mature larvae, pupae, or adults opt to enter diapause. In response to food shortages, insects may try to find sufficient food to maintain normal growth and metabolism through distribution of populations or even migration. In the face of hunger or starvation, insect responses can include changes in behavior and/or maintenance of a low metabolic rate through physiological adaptations or regulation. For instance, in order to maintain homeostasis of the blood sugar, trehalose under starvation stress, other sugars can be transformed to sustain basic energy metabolism. Furthermore, as the severity of starvation increases, lipids (especially triglycerides) are broken down to improve hunger resistance. Starvation stress simultaneously initiates a series of neural signals and hormone regulation processes in insects. These processes involve neurons or neuropeptides, immunity-related genes, levels of autophagy, heat shock proteins and juvenile hormone levels which maintain lower levels of physiological metabolic activity. This work focuses on hunger stress in insects and reviews its effects on behavior, energy reserve utilization, and physiological regulation. In summary, we highlight the diversity in adaptive strategies of insects to hunger stress and provides potential ideas to improve hunger resistance and cold storage development of natural enemy insects. This gist of literature on insects also broadens our understanding of the factors that dictate phenotypic plasticity in adjusting development and life histories around nutritionally optimal environmental conditions.

Highlights

  • Food is a critical source of nutrients and an important external factor in insect survival

  • These behavioral adjustments are aimed at limiting population size to ensure availability of sufficient food for the existing population

  • Hunger before flight can have a negative impact on flight endurance (Kehl and Fischer, 2012), for instance, the speed and angular velocity of beetles decrease with increasing hunger (Nguyen, 2008)

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Summary

Insect Behavior and Physiological Adaptation Mechanisms Under Starvation Stress

Edited by: Su Wang, Beijing Academy of Agricultural and Forestry Sciences, China. Reviewed by: Leena Thorat, Savitribai Phule Pune University, India Shoaib Freed, Bahauddin Zakariya University, Pakistan. Specialty section: This article was submitted to Invertebrate Physiology, a section of the journal Frontiers in Physiology

Behavior and Physiological Adaptation Mechanisms Under
INTRODUCTION
REGULATION OF INSECT BEHAVIOR UNDER STARVATION
PHYSIOLOGICAL REGULATION OF INSECT ENERGY UNDER STARVATION STRESS
Rhodnius prolixus
Nerve Signals and Hormones
FUTURE PROSPECTS
Full Text
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