Institut de Recherche sur la Biologie de l'Insecte, UMR 7261 CNRS - Université François Rabelais, Tours, France.
Instituto de Ciências Biológicas, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte, Brazil.
Elife. 2017 Nov 21;6:e26107. doi: 10.7554/eLife.26107.
Blood-sucking insects experience thermal stress at each feeding event on endothermic vertebrates. We used thermography to examine how kissing-bugs actively protect themselves from overheating. During feeding, these bugs sequester and dissipate the excess heat in their heads while maintaining an abdominal temperature close to ambient. We employed a functional-morphological approach, combining histology, µCT and X-ray-synchrotron imaging to shed light on the way these insects manage the flow of heat across their bodies. The close alignment of the circulatory and ingestion systems, as well as other morphological characteristics, support the existence of a countercurrent heat exchanger in the head of , which decreases the temperature of the ingested blood before it reaches the abdomen. This kind of system has never been described before in the head of an insect. For the first time, we show that countercurrent heat exchange is associated to thermoregulation during blood-feeding.
吸血昆虫在以温血脊椎动物为食的每一次进食事件中都会经历热应激。我们使用热成像技术来研究接吻虫如何主动保护自己免受过热。在进食过程中,这些虫子会隔离和散发头部多余的热量,同时保持腹部温度接近环境温度。我们采用了功能形态学方法,结合组织学、µCT 和 X 射线同步辐射成像,揭示了这些昆虫在身体内管理热量流动的方式。循环系统和摄食系统的紧密排列以及其他形态特征,支持在 头部存在逆流热交换器,它可以降低进入腹部之前摄入血液的温度。这种系统以前从未在昆虫头部描述过。我们首次表明,逆流热交换与吸血过程中的体温调节有关。