23 research outputs found

    Survival and development of Campoletis chlorideae on various insect and crop hosts: implications for Bt-transgenic crops

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    The parasitic wasp, Campoletis chlorideae is an important larval parasitoid of Helicoverpa armigera a serious pest of cotton, grain legumes and cereals. Large-scale deployment of Bt-transgenic crops with resistance to H. armigera may have potential consequences for the development and survival of C. chlorideae. Therefore, we studied the tritrophic interactions of C. chlorideae involving eight insect host species and six host crops under laboratory conditions. The recovery of H. armigera larvae following release was greater on pigeonpea and chickpea when compared with cotton, groundnut and pearl millet. The parasitism by C. chlorideae females was least with reduction in cocoon formation and adult emergence on H. armigera larvae released on chickpea. Host insects also had significant effect on the development and survival of C. chlorideae. The larval period of C. chlorideae was prolonged by 2-3 days on Spodoptera exigua, Mythimna separata and Achaea janata when compared with H. armigera, Helicoverpa assulta and Spodoptera litura. Maximum cocoon formation and adult emergence were recorded on H. armigera (82.4% and 70.5%, respectively) than on other insect hosts. These studies have important implications on development and survival of C. chlorideae on alternate insect hosts on non-transgenic crop plants, when there is paucity of H. armigera larvae on transgenic crops expressing Bt-toxins

    Active elastohydrodynamics of vesicles in narrow blind constrictions

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    Lubricated immersed boundary method in two dimensions

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    Lubricated immersed boundary method in two dimensions

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    Many biological examples of fluid–structure interaction, including the transit of red blood cells through the narrow slits in the spleen and the intracellular trafficking of vesicles into dendritic spines, involve the near-contact of elastic structures separated by thin layers of fluid. Motivated by such problems, we introduce an immersed boundary method that uses elements of lubrication theory to resolve thin fluid layers between immersed boundaries. We demonstrate 2nd-order accurate convergence for simple two-dimensional flows with known exact solutions to showcase the increased accuracy of this method compared to the standard immersed boundary method. Motivated by the phenomenon of wall-induced migration, we apply the lubricated immersed boundary method to simulate an elastic vesicle near a wall in shear flow. We also simulate the dynamics of a vesicle traveling through a narrow channel and observe the ability of the lubricated method to capture the vesicle motion on relatively coarse fluid grids

    Simulation of osmotic swelling by the stochastic immersed boundary method

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    We develop computational methods for the simulation of osmotic swelling phenomena relevant to microscopic vesicles containing transformable solute molecules. We introduce stochastic immersed boundary methods (SIBMs) that can capture osmotically driven fluid transport through semipermeable elastic membranes subject to thermal fluctuations. We also develop numerical methods to handle within SIBMs an elastic shell model for a neo-Hookean material. Our extended SIBM allows for capturing osmotic swelling phenomena driven by concentration changes and interactions between a discrete collection of confined particles while accounting for the thermal fluctuations of the semipermeable membrane and the hydrodynamic transport of solvent. We use our computational methods to investigate osmotic phenomena in regimes that go beyond the classical Van't Hoff theory. We develop statistical mechanics theories for osmotic swelling of vesicles when there are significant interactions between particles that can transform over time. We validate our theoretical results against detailed computational simulations. Our methods are expected to be useful for a wide class of applications allowing for the simulation of osmotically driven flows, thermally fluctuating semipermeable elastic structures, and solute interactions
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