There are many biomechanical challenges that a female insect must meet to successfully oviposit and ensure her evolutionary success. These begin with selection of a suitable substrate through which the ovipositor must penetrate without itself buckling or fracturing. The second phase corresponds to steering and manipulating the ovipositor to deliver eggs at desired locations. Finally, the insect must retract her ovipositor fast to avoid possible predation and repeat this process multiple times during her lifetime. From a materials perspective, insect oviposition is a fascinating problem and poses many questions. Specifically, are there diverse mechanisms that insects use to drill through hard substrates without itself buckling or fracturing?...
Resource partitioning is facilitated by adaptations along niche dimensions that range from morpholog...
The exoskeleton of an insect can contain countless specializations across an individual, across deve...
Many parasitic wasps use slender and steerable ovipositors to lay eggs in hosts hidden in substrates...
Female insects of diverse orders bore into substrates to deposit their eggs. Such insects must overc...
Drilling into solid substrates with slender beam-like structures is a mechanical challenge, but is r...
In the course of evolution, animals and particularly insects, have developed efficient and complex m...
Drilling into solid substrates with slender beam-like structures is a mechanical challenge, but is r...
Hemipterans, mosquitoes, and parasitic wasps probe in a variety of substrates to find hosts for thei...
Many parasitic wasps use slender and steerable ovipositors to lay eggs in hosts hidden in substrates...
Parasitic wasps use specialized needle-like structures—ovipositors—to drill in substrates to reach h...
Insects such as mosquitoes, true bugs, and parasitic wasps, probe for resources hidden in various su...
The cuticle of certain insect body parts can be hardened by the addition of metals, and because nich...
The cuticle of certain insect body parts can be hardened by the addition of metals, and because nich...
A typical feature of many biological materials is their ability to adapt to mechanical load. Bone re...
THESIS 11055Insect cuticle is a composite material comprised of chitin fibres embedded in a protein ...
Resource partitioning is facilitated by adaptations along niche dimensions that range from morpholog...
The exoskeleton of an insect can contain countless specializations across an individual, across deve...
Many parasitic wasps use slender and steerable ovipositors to lay eggs in hosts hidden in substrates...
Female insects of diverse orders bore into substrates to deposit their eggs. Such insects must overc...
Drilling into solid substrates with slender beam-like structures is a mechanical challenge, but is r...
In the course of evolution, animals and particularly insects, have developed efficient and complex m...
Drilling into solid substrates with slender beam-like structures is a mechanical challenge, but is r...
Hemipterans, mosquitoes, and parasitic wasps probe in a variety of substrates to find hosts for thei...
Many parasitic wasps use slender and steerable ovipositors to lay eggs in hosts hidden in substrates...
Parasitic wasps use specialized needle-like structures—ovipositors—to drill in substrates to reach h...
Insects such as mosquitoes, true bugs, and parasitic wasps, probe for resources hidden in various su...
The cuticle of certain insect body parts can be hardened by the addition of metals, and because nich...
The cuticle of certain insect body parts can be hardened by the addition of metals, and because nich...
A typical feature of many biological materials is their ability to adapt to mechanical load. Bone re...
THESIS 11055Insect cuticle is a composite material comprised of chitin fibres embedded in a protein ...
Resource partitioning is facilitated by adaptations along niche dimensions that range from morpholog...
The exoskeleton of an insect can contain countless specializations across an individual, across deve...
Many parasitic wasps use slender and steerable ovipositors to lay eggs in hosts hidden in substrates...