Doktoravhandlinger ved NTNU
Härtill 4 uppsatser PhD i biologi When the study of this thesis was initiated, hardly any work had been carried out on how plant odour information was encoded by the olfactory RNs in heliothine moths. The method of gas chromatography linked to single cell recordings (GC-SCR) was employed and improve...
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Sprache: | eng ; swe |
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Zusammenfassung: | Härtill 4 uppsatser
PhD i biologi
When the study of this thesis was initiated, hardly any work had been carried out on how plant odour information was encoded by the olfactory RNs in heliothine moths. The method of gas chromatography linked to single cell recordings (GC-SCR) was employed and improved for identifying naturally occurring plant odorants that are detected by single RNs and can be considered as biologically relevant. Three species of the subfamily Heliothinae were included in this work, the two polyphagous H. virescens and H. armigera and the oligophagous H. assulta . The American H. virescens is geographically separated from the other two species. H. armigera and H. assulta are partly sympatric in Asia and Australia.
The aims of the thesis elucidated in Papers I-IV were as follows:
1. To identify plant produced volatiles detected by antennal RNs in the three species of the subfamily Heliothinae.
2. To elucidate whether the single RNs can be classified into distinct types according to their specificity.
3. To characterise the plant odour RN types by their molecular receptive ranges, sensitivity and specificity.
4. To compare the specificity of plant odour RN types across the three related species of Heliothinae, with the aim to reveal any differences in the peripheral olfactory system that may have evolved through evolution.
PhD in Biology
When the study of this thesis was initiated, hardly any work had been carried out on how plant odour information was encoded by the olfactory RNs in heliothine moths. The method of gas chromatography linked to single cell recordings (GC-SCR) was employed and improved for identifying naturally occurring plant odorants that are detected by single RNs and can be considered as biologically relevant. Three species of the subfamily Heliothinae were included in this work, the two polyphagous H. virescens and H. armigera and the oligophagous H. assulta . The American H. virescens is geographically separated from the other two species. H. armigera and H. assulta are partly sympatric in Asia and Australia.
The aims of the thesis elucidated in Papers I-IV were as follows:
1. To identify plant produced volatiles detected by antennal RNs in the three species of the subfamily Heliothinae.
2. To elucidate whether the single RNs can be classified into distinct types according to their specificity.
3. To characterise the plant odour RN types by their molecular receptive ranges, sensitivity and specificity.
4. To compare the s |
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