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The use of visual information by house flies,Musca domestica (Diptera: Muscidae), foraging in resource patches
Authors:Donna Conlon  William J Bell
Institution:(1) Department of Entomology, University of Kansas, 66045-2106 Lawrence, KS, USA;(2) Department of Physiology & Cell Biology, University of Kansas, 66045-2106 Lawrence, KS, USA
Abstract:Summary House flies, Musca domestica, respond to visual contrasts on the substrate if a resource is associated with the contrasting patterns. Visible resource patch boundaries serve as a signal to flies that they are about to leave a rewarding patch. Searching flies respond to such visual information by walking along the resource patch boundary and turning back into the patch at its edge. This edge detection and response serve as a mechanism for flies with visual cues to stay in a rewarding patch and locate more resources within it. The intensity of their response correlates with the quality of the resource. In the absence of visual cues, patch shape affects foraging success; flies find more resources in circular than in linear resource distributions. The effects of visual cues, however, render patch shape unimportant. Various substrate contrasts are effective as resource information for flies: dark (e.g., green) figures on bright (e.g., white) backgrounds or bright figures on dark backgrounds. Responses to substrate contrasts measured in this study indicate that, over the short term, house flies can learn a visual cue associated with a food source.
Keywords:Orientation  Searching behavior  Musca domestica  Visual cue  Foraging success
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