School of Biological Sciences, University of Queensland, St. Lucia, Queensland 4072, Australia.
Am Nat. 2011 Jan;177(1):130-4. doi: 10.1086/657619. Epub 2010 Nov 18.
Some insects display an intermittent pattern of gas exchange while at rest, often going hours between breaths. These discontinuous gas exchange cycles (DGCs) are known to have evolved independently within five insect orders, but their possible adaptive benefit and evolutionary origin remain an enigma. Current research is primarily concerned with testing three adaptive hypotheses: that DGCs originally evolved or are currently maintained to (1) limit respiratory water loss, (2) enhance gas exchange in subterranean environments, or (3) limit oxidative damage. These adaptive explanations fail to unite a range of apparently contradictory observations regarding the insects that display DGCs and the conditions under which they occur. Here we argue that DGCs are explained by circadian, developmental, or artificially induced reductions in brain activity. We conclude that this pattern results from the thoracic and abdominal ganglia regulating ventilation in the absence of control from higher neural centers, and it is indicative of a sleeplike state.
有些昆虫在休息时会表现出间歇性的气体交换模式,经常每隔几个小时才呼吸一次。这种不连续的气体交换循环(DGC)已被发现在五个昆虫目内独立进化,但它们可能的适应益处和进化起源仍然是一个谜。目前的研究主要集中在测试三个适应性假说上:DGC 最初是为了(1)限制呼吸失水、(2)增强地下环境中的气体交换、或(3)限制氧化损伤而进化或目前得以维持。这些适应性解释未能将一系列关于表现出 DGC 的昆虫以及它们发生的条件的明显矛盾的观察结果统一起来。在这里,我们认为 DGC 是由昼夜节律、发育或人为诱导的大脑活动减少引起的。我们的结论是,这种模式是由胸部和腹部神经节在没有来自更高神经中枢的控制的情况下调节通风引起的,这表明是一种类似睡眠的状态。