Snow Fleas Pack a Chemical Weapon
Despite its diminutive size, the snow flea, also called a spring tail, has garnered an online fan base for some of the charming strategies it uses to evade predators.
It’s easy to overlook the snow flea: The millimeter-long insect could be mistaken for a flake of pepper on a white wintery landscape. But the little organism packs some powerful chemistry. Researchers led by at the Technical University, Braunschweig, in Germany, report that the snow flea, or , produces polychlorinated compounds to repel predators ( 2015, DOI: 10.1002/anie.201501719). The family of defense compounds, including Sigillin A, is unique in that it is a new class of natural products that features a chemical scaffold that could find application in insect control.
“It’s a very surprising discovery,” comments , a chemical ecologist at Rothamsted Research Station, in Harpenden, England. It’s not often that scientists find any halogens in natural products made by terrestrial organisms, he says. And “here, there’s not just one chlorine, but five chlorines.”
Chemical & Engineering News (© American Chemical Society). The article was
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