Abstract:
L-canavanine, a nonprotein amino acid structurally similar to L-arginine,
is potentially toxic to many insects. In northwestern Guanacaste Province in Costa Rica,
most insect seed predators do not feed on seeds that contain canavanine. However, several
larval Coleoptera have become specialists on canavanine-containing seeds. Three of these
beetles were compared with a number of other insects with regard to their biochemical
ability to deal with and utilize L-canavanine. Our analyses revealed that certain biochemical
capacities required by canavanine-feeding insects may have existed prior to their exposure
to dietary canavanine.
Key words: at~r:inase;