, 2004). In our observations coordinated motor activity ceased with activity CTmax, but spastic leg movements and slight bending and relaxing of the abdomen (which resembled slow motion respiration movements, but clearly were not) could be observed in almost all individuals until the post mortal valley and the post mortal peak, respectively ( Fig. 6). These small-scale spasms might escape automated activity measurement, but were distinctly visible in our IR video sequences. We conclude from these observations that for determination of the CTmax video analyses are of great benefit if it is to judge activity in fine detail
( Hazell et al., 2008 and Hazell and Bale, 2011). Our thermographic temperature Selleckchem Roscovitine Alectinib chemical structure measurements revealed that the final bouts of CO2 release after the loss of respiratory
control are caused by heating bouts (Fig. 5 and Fig. 6). The respiratory peaks, therefore, are the result of activation of the flight muscles (Fig. 5, thermograms). They are not caused by a general derailment of cellular metabolism, nor are they exclusively the consequence of a final diffusive loss of CO2 due to spiracle opening. As heat produced by the thoracic muscles still reaches the head (Fig. 5, thermograms (b) and (c)), blood circulation (via heart and aorta) seems to be still active. Such final metabolic postmortal peaks (Lighton and Turner, 2004) were also observed in beetles (Gonocephalum simplex, Klok et al., 2004; Tenebrio molitor, Stevens et al., 2010) and even in ants (Pogonomyrmex rugosus, Lighton and Turner, 2004). In Polistes dominulus we also observed such thoracic heating bouts (our own unpublished results) though this species is known to be only weakly PD184352 (CI-1040) endothermic ( Kovac et al., 2009 and Weiner et al., 2009). It would be interesting whether the postmortal metabolic peaks in other species are also caused by (flight) muscle activation. The increase in CO2 production as well as thoracic heating shortly after the wasps’ CTmax (see arrows in Figs. 6 A and B) might result from a loss of nervous control of
the flight musculature. To answer this question, however, electrophysiological recordings of the motoneurons and neuronal centers controlling flight would be needed. Heat-induced mortality in hornets and bees has been determined so far strictly in the context of defensive behavior (heat-balling of predating wasps by bees) in LD50 tests (Ono et al., 1995, Sugahara and Sakamoto, 2009 and Tan et al., 2005). In Central European wasps, which are also combated via heat by bees ( Stabentheiner, 1996 and Stabentheiner et al., 2007), such information was missing. The difference in wasp and honeybee respiratory and activity CTmax of 3.6 °C and 4.2 °C, respectively, might be large enough to enable honeybees to kill predating yellowjackets by heat-balling. Papachristoforou et al.