Skip Navigational Links Research and Collections Home Return to CU Museum Homepage Planning Your Visit Exhibits Research and Collections Calendar Education Museum and Field Studies About the Museum Gift Store Get Involved! Search Research and Collections
Databases Zoology Paleontology Entomology Botany and University Herbarium Anthropology Research and Collections Sub-Navigational Menu
Picture of one-spotted tortoise beetle

An adult One-spotted Tortoise Beetle (Physonota unipunctata).

University of Colorado Museum of Natural History Object of the Month!

The One-spotted Tortoise Beetle (Physonota unipunctata)

Tortoise beetles are herbivores, meaning that they eat plants. Herbivores may be generalists, eating many different kinds of plants, or they may be specialists, eating only one or a few closely related plant species.

Plants, however, have ways to reduce feeding by herbivores. One such form of protection is the production of chemical compounds that are distasteful or harmful if eaten. Specialist insects have evolved the ability to feed on plants high in these chemical compounds and to use these compounds for their own protection against predators.

Many species of leaf beetles (family Chrysomelidae) are specialists on plants high in defensive compounds and often recycle these compounds to use for their own defense. The tortoise beetles (subfamily Cassidinae) are noted for their use of host plant chemical compounds for protective purposes.

Image of beetle larva

A One-spotted Tortoise Beetle larva, with a fecal shield used to defend from predators.

Adults and larvae both feed upon the host plant. Larvae usually feed in groups and typically accumulate a fecal shield on a caudal fork, which consists primarily of their frass (= poop). This frass is very rich in host plant chemical compounds and is waved or thrust at potential predators and is a very effective means of defense.

Ken Keefover-Ring, a recent graduate from the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, studied the One-spotted Tortoise Beetle (also called the Horsemint Tortoise Beetle or Bee Balm Tortoise Beetle), Physonota unipunctata, and its host plant in the mint family (Lamiaceae), Monarda fistulosa, called Horsemint, Bee Balm or Wild Bergamot.

Image of Horsemint

Horsemint (Monarda fistulosa), the host plant of the One-spotted Tortoise Beetle.

Like most mints, Horsemint produces terpene compounds in trichomes on leaves and reproductive parts, which defend the plant against most herbivores, but not the tortoise beetle. These compounds are eliminated in the insect's frass and are the primary defense components of the fecal shield. Whether the specialist tortoise beetle has played a role in shaping the chemistry of Horsemint and whether there are reciprocal effects of host chemistry on the herbivore are unknown.

For previous Objects of the Month, check out our Archive.

Horizontal Black Rule
University of Colorado Museum of Natural History Logo Sign up for the CU Museum Update! It's FREE!
For general questions or comments, please email cumuseum@colorado.edu.
Send technical questions and comments to the Webmaster.
©2003 CU Museum, UCB 218, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado 80309  tel: (303)492-6892
Accredited by the American Association of Museums
Black Bar