Mexican jumping beans jump to safety in a dynamic world, new research reveals
Light and seed host damage could influence how moth larvae avoid extreme heat

What makes Mexican jumping beans jump? New research from 亚洲情色 reveals that Mexican jumping bean larvae respond to different colors of light, jumping more vigorously under different hues, which can help them avoid potentially dangerous temperatures. However, when their 鈥榖ean鈥 hosts are damaged, larvae find it much harder to jump away from stressors.
Mexican jumping beans are sold as toys, something you might buy on vacation at the boardwalk, but they鈥檙e actually seeds infected with the larvae of little white moths. The seeds 鈥渏ump鈥 when the larvae inside strike the inside of the wall, causing them to move.
鈥淲hen a seed drops to the ground from shrubs, the moth larva inside is at the mercy of whatever environmental temperature the seed experiences,鈥 said Lindsey Swerk, assistant research professor of biological sciences. 鈥淭he ground could be scorching hot in direct sunlight. A little moth larva inside of a seed like this can only withstand so much heat - and so they jump away.鈥
The seeds that these moth larvae inhabit are part of its 鈥榚xtended architecture鈥, which is a term to describe a structure that an organism uses as part of its body but doesn鈥檛 create itself (think of a hermit crab鈥檚 scavenged shell). In the case of Mexican jumping beans, the seed is a larva鈥檚 extended architecture.
Very little is known about Mexican jumping beans and how they respond to stressors in their environments. To learn more about these seed-bound caterpillars, Swierk and her students designed two experiments.
, the team explored how different colors of light impact movement behavior in the larvae. Swierk鈥檚 students (Faith Summers, Amber Tuske, Cassandra Puglisi, Annie Wong, and Andr茅s Rojo) hypothesized that changes in hue might provide an 鈥渆arly warning system鈥 for larvae to avoid extreme heat. The students tested larval movement in reaction to different lighting conditions (red, purple, and green light, with white light as a control) and how much of that light actually penetrated the seed wall to reach the larvae. Although less than 1% of light actually penetrated the seed wall, larvae moved the most under red light and the least under purple light, which are at opposite ends of the visual spectrum.
鈥淪omehow larvae are picking up on these differences. Whether that鈥檚 because of very minute temperature changes or because of extremely sensitive photoreceptors, we鈥檙e not sure yet,鈥 said Swierk. 鈥淏ut they鈥檙e using light somehow as a cue to change their behavior, which probably has to do with the fact that these different lighting spectra are correlated with different environmental conditions. Red and white light are more characteristic of daytime lighting, while green and purple light are associated with the light under forest canopies or sunset and sunrise.鈥
Expanding on the theme of how the environment influences jumping behavior, Swierk and her students next explored a fascinating tradeoff. Larvae have the ability to repair damage to their host seeds with silk threads, but this could affect their ability to avoid heat by jumping. , Swierk鈥檚 students (Anna Purtell, Jesse Anderson, Rebecca Ferguson, Konrad Juskiewicz, Michael Lee and Megan Lee) predicted that making a silk repair patch would be costly to the larva and reduce its ability to jump away from a heat stimulus.
The researchers designed an experiment where some larvae had damaged seed walls they could repair, and others had damaged walls but no time for repairs. A third control group experienced no damage at all. Both damaged groups were less likely to jump in response to high temperatures, while the control group responded appropriately and moved out of the way.
Swierk said this suggests that the damage itself, and not the cost of silk production, in some way hinders movement in these larvae. It鈥檚 possible that seed damage like this, which mimics predators in nature, can disconnect the silk threads that attach a larva to the inside of a host seed so that it couldn鈥檛 make a rocking or jumping movement.
鈥淭hese are animals that are extremely sensitive to temperature. A common story here is that we see these larvae using very nuanced cues to change their behavior in response to heat, and we鈥檙e also seeing that additional stressors like predation attempts can impair their ability to appropriately respond to temperature,鈥 said Swierk.
This research has potentially broader implications for insects around the world, said Swierk.
鈥淩esponding to temperature change is a big deal. As the climate changes, we need to learn how animals detect imminent thermal stress and what limits their adaptive responses. What we learn about Mexican jumping bean larvae might help us better understand how other insects with limited movement cope with heat stress in their environments.鈥