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1.
There is a change in the synaptic connections between motor neurones that underlie locust kicking and jumping during maturation following the adult moult. The fast extensor tibiae (FETi) motor neurone makes monosynaptic excitatory connections with flexor tibiae motor neurones that have previously been implicated in maintaining flexor activity during the co-contraction phase of jumping, in which energy generated by the muscles of a hind leg is stored. The amplitude of the FETi spike decreases when repetitively activated, and this decrement is larger in locusts immediately following the adult moult than in mature locusts. The decrement in␣the FETi spike is correlated with a greater decrease in the amplitude of the flexor excitatory postsynaptic potential (EPSP) in newly moulted locusts and in turn with the failure of these locusts to kick or jump. The results presented here indicate that the developmental change in the connections between the motor neurones contributes to the change in behaviour following the moult. Accepted: 28 April 1997  相似文献   

2.
1.  Two campaniform sensilla (CS) on the proximal tibia of a hindleg monitor strains set up when a locust prepares to kick, or when a resistance is met during locomotion. The connections made by these afferents with interneurones and leg motor neurones have been investigated and correlated with their role in locomotion.
2.  When flexor and extensor tibiae muscles cocontract before a kick afferents from both campaniform sensilla spike at frequencies up to 650 Hz. They do not spike when the tibia is extended actively or passively unless it encounters a resistance. The fast extensor tibiae motor neurone (FETi) then produces a sequence of spikes in a thrusting response with feedback from the CS afferents maintaining the excitation. Destroying the two campaniform sensilla abolishes the re-excitation of FETi.
3.  Mechanical stimulation of a single sensillum excites extensor and flexor tibiae motor neurones. The single afferent from either CS evokes EPSPs in the fast extensor motor neurone and in certain fast flexor tibiae motor neurones which follow each sensory spike with a central latency of 1.6 ms that suggests direct connections. The input from one receptor is powerful enough to evoke spikes in FETi. The slow extensor motor neurone does not receive a direct input, although it is excited and slow flexor tibiae motor neurones are unaffected.
4.  Some nonspiking interneurones receive direct connections from both afferents in parallel with the motor neurones. One of these interneurones excites the slow and fast extensor tibiae motor neurones probably by disinhibition. Hyperpolarization of this interneurone abolishes the excitatory effect of the CS on the slow extensor motor neurone and reduces the excitation of the fast. The disinhibitory pathway may involve a second nonspiking interneurone with direct inhibitory connections to both extensor motor neurones. Other nonspiking interneurones distribute the effects of the CS afferents to motor neurones of other joints.
5.  The branches of the afferents from the campaniform sensilla and those of the motor neurones and interneurones in which they evoke EPSPs project to the same regions of neuropil in the metathoracic ganglion.
6.  The pathways described will ensure that more force is generated by the extensor muscle when the tibia is extended against a resistance. The excitatory feedback to the extensor and flexor motor neurones will also contribute to their co-contraction when generating the force necessary for a kick.
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3.
Strain acting on the exoskeleton of insects is monitored by campaniform sensilla. On the tibia of a mesothoracic leg of the locust (Schistocerca gregaria) there are three groups of campaniform sensilla on the proximo-dorsal surface. This study analyses the responses of the afferents from one group, their connections with central neurones and their actions during walking.The afferents of the campaniform sensilla make direct excitatory connections with flexor tibiae motor neurones. They also make direct connections with particular spiking local interneurones that make direct inhibitory output connections with the slow extensor tibiae motor neurone.During walking extension movements of the tibiae during stance produce longitudinal tensile forces on the dorsal tibia that peak during mid stance before returning to zero prior to swing. This decline in tension can activate the campaniform sensilla. In turn this would lead to an inhibition of the extensor tibiae motor neurone and an excitation of the flexor tibiae motor neurones. This, therefore, aids the transition from stance to swing. During turning movements, the tibia is flexed and the dorsal surface is put under compression. This can also activate some of campaniform sensilla whose effect on the flexor motor neurones will reinforce the flexion of the tibia.  相似文献   

4.
Motor patterns during kicking movements in the locust   总被引:2,自引:2,他引:0  
Locusts (Schistocerca gregaria) use a distinctive motor pattern to extend the tibia of a hind leg rapidly in a kick. The necessary force is generated by an almost isometric contraction of the extensor tibiae muscle restrained by the co-contraction of the flexor tibiae (co-contraction phase) and aided by the mechanics of the femoro-tibial joint. The stored energy is delivered suddenly when the flexor muscle is inhibited. This paper analyses the activity of motor neurons to the major hind leg muscles during kicking, and relates it to tibial movements and the resultant forces.During the co-contraction phase flexor tibiae motor neurons are driven by apparently common sources of synaptic inputs to depolarized plateaus at which they spike. The two excitatory extensor motor neurons are also depolarized by similar patterns of synaptic inputs, but with the slow producing more spikes at higher frequencies than the fast. Trochanteral depressors spike at high frequency, the single levator tarsi at low frequency, and common inhibitors 2 and 3 spike sporadically. Trochanteral levators, depressor tarsi, and a retractor unguis motor neuron are hyperpolarized.Before the tibia extends all flexor motor neurons are hyperpolarized simultaneously, two common inhibitors, and the levator trochanter and depressor tarsi motor neurons are depolarized. Later, but still before the tibial movement starts, the extensor tibiae and levator tarsi motor neurons are hyperpolarized. After the movement has started, the extensor motor neurons are hyperpolarized further and the depressor trochanteris motor neurons are also hyperpolarized, indicating a contribution of both central and sensory feedback pathways.Variations in the duration of the co-contraction of almost twenty-fold, and in the number of spikes in the fast extensor tibiae motor neuron from 2–50 produce a spectrum of tibial extensions ranging from slow and weak, to rapid and powerful. Flexibility in the networks producing the motor pattern therefore results in a range of movements suited to the fluctuating requirements of the animal.  相似文献   

5.
The pharmacology of the direct central connections between the fast extensor and flexor motor neurones of a locust (Schistocerca gregaria) hind leg was studied. A spike in the fast extensor produces an EPSP in the flexor motor neurones. Glutamate depolarized the flexor motor neurones when injected into the neuropil. Quisqualate, but not by kainate or NMDA, also depolarized the flexor motor neurones. The fast extensor was also depolarized by glutamate, and also by kainate, but not by quisqualate, AMPA or NMDA. The glutamate response in the flexor motor neurones and the EPSP evoked by a spike in FETi both had similar reversal potentials. The FETi-evoked EPSP was blocked by bath application of the glutamate antagonist glutamic acid diethyl ester. The responses of extrasynaptic somata receptors to glutamate were compared to the neuropil responses. Glutamate usually hyperpolarized the somata of FETi and the flexor motor neurones. The response of a flexor motor neurone to glutamate was abolished at potentials less negative than -90 mV. The results provide evidence for glutamate transmission at central synapses in the locust, and show that presumed synaptic receptors in the neuropil differ to the extrasynaptic soma response  相似文献   

6.
The cuticle strain which develops in the hindleg tibiae when a locust prepares to kick, or when the tibia thrusts against an obstacle, is detected by two campaniform sensilla, which reflexly excite the fast extensor tibiae motoneuron, some of the flexor tibiae motoneurons and nonspiking interneurons. The reflex excitation is adaptive for the extensor motoneuron during both co-activation and thrusting, but is only adaptive for the flexor motoneurons during co-activation, and is maladaptive during thrusting. We show that the femoral chordotonal organ, which monitors tibial position, controls the efficacy of the strain feedback. The campaniform sensilla-induced depolarization in the extensor motoneuron is about twice as large when the tendon is in mid position (reflecting a tibial-femoral angle of 90°) than when fully stretched (reflecting tibial flexion), while in the flexors the reverse is true. The amplitudes of excitatory postsynaptic potentials evoked by single campaniform sensilla spikes, are, however, not affected. Our data suggests that the chordotonal organ modulates the gain of the strain feedback onto the motoneurons by exciting interneuronal circuits whose output sums with the former. Thrusting typically occurs with the tibia partially extended, therefore the actions of the chordotonal organ support the production of a maximal thrusting force. Accepted: 27 December 1996  相似文献   

7.
The effect of octopamine on the fast extensor and the flexor tibiae motor neurones in the locust (Schistocerca gregaria) metathoracic ganglion, and also on synaptic transmission from the fast extensor to the flexor motor neurones, was examined. Bath application or ionophoresis of octopamine depolarized and increased the excitability of the flexor tibiae motor neurones. 1 mM octopamine reduced the amplitude of the fast extensor-evoked EPSP in the slow but not the fast flexor motor neurones, whereas 10 mM octopamine could reduce the EPSP amplitude in both. Octopamine broadened the fast extensor action potential and reduced the amplitude of the afterhyperpolarization, the modulation requiring feedback resulting from movement of the tibia. Octopamine also increased the frequency of synaptic inputs onto the tibial motor neurones, and could cause rhythmic activity in the flexor motor neurones, and reciprocal activity in flexor and extensor motor neurones. Octopamine also increased the frequency of spontaneous spiking in the octopaminergic dorsal unpaired median neurones. Repetitive stimulation of unidentified dorsal unpaired median neurones could mimic some of the effects of octopamine. However, no synaptic connections were found between dorsal unpaired median neurones and the tibial motor neurones. The diverse effects of octopamine support its role in mediating arousal.  相似文献   

8.
Summary Changing the temperature from 10–40 °C modifies the transmission at an established monosynaptic connection between the fast extensor tibiae (FETi) and flexor tibiae motor neurons in the metathoracic ganglion of the locustSchistocerca gregaria (Forskål). Striking changes occur to the shape of the spikes, to membrane resistance, to the synaptic delay, and to the evoked synaptic potentials.In the presynaptic FETi motor neuron, raising the temperature reduces the amplitude of an antidromic spike recorded in the soma by a factor of 10 (40 mV to 4 mV), reduces the time taken to reach peak amplitude by 5 (3.5 to 0.7 ms) and decreases the duration at half maximum amplitude by 0.5. The conduction velocity of the spike in the axon is increased by 50% from 10 °C to 40 °C. Orthodromic spikes are affected by temperature in a similar way to the antidromic spikes.The membrane resistance of both pre- and postsynaptic motor neurons falls as the temperature is raised. The membrane resistance of FETi falls by a factor of 4 (about 4 M at 10 °C to 1 M at 40 °C). A contributory component to this fall could be the increase in the frequency of synaptic potentials generated as a result of inputs from other neurons. No temperature dependence could be demonstrated on the voltage threshold relative to resting potential for evoking orthodromic spikes, but because the resistance changes, the current needed to achieve this voltage must be increased at higher temperatures.The latency measured from the peak of the spike in the soma of FETi to the start of the EPSP in the soma of a flexor motor neuron decreases by a factor of 20 (10 ms at 10 °C to 0.5 ms at 40 °C).In a postsynaptic flexor tibiae motor neuron, the amplitude of the evoked synaptic potential increases by a factor of 3.4 (5 mV to 17 mV), its duration at half maximum amplitude decreases by 3 (7 ms at 12 °C to 2.3 ms at 32 °C) and its rate of rise increases by 3. An increased likelihood that spikes will occur in the flexor contributes to the enhanced amplitude of the compound EPSP at temperatures above 20 °C.Abbreviation FETi fast extensor tibiae motor neuron  相似文献   

9.
Taste receptors, or basiconic sensilla, are distributed over the legs of the locust and respond to direct contact with chemical stimulants. The same chemosensory neurones that responded to contact with salt solutions also responded to particular acidic odours. Odours of food and other chemicals had no effect on the chemosensory neurones. In locusts free to move, an acid odour presented to the tarsus of a hind leg evoked a rapid avoidance movement in which the tarsus was levated, the tibia flexed and the femur levated. Intracellular recordings from motor neurones that innervate muscles of the hind leg showed that when an acid odour was directed towards basiconic sensilla on the leg there was a reciprocal activation of antagonistic motor pools that move the leg segments about each joint. Thus an extensor tibiae motor neurone was inhibited while a flexor tibiae motor neurone was excited, and the tarsal depressor and retractor unguis motor neurones were inhibited while the tarsal levator motor neurone was excited. This method of odour stimulation of taste receptors generates less adaptation than direct contact with chemicals, and therefore represents an ideal method for stimulating taste receptors for further studies on the central pathways processing taste signals. Accepted: 2 June 1998  相似文献   

10.
Twenty-one prothoracic and 17 mesothoracic motor neurons innervating leg muscles have been identified physiologically and subsequently injected with dye from a microelectrode. A tract containing the primary neurites of motor neurons innervating the retractor unquis, levator and depressor tarsus, flexor tibiae, and reductor femora is described. All motor neurons studied have regions in which their dendritic branches overlap with those of other leg motor neurons. Identified, serially homologous motor neurons in the three thoracic ganglia were found to have: (1) cell bodies at similar locations and morphologically similar primary neurites (e.g., flexor tibiae motor neurons), (2) cell bodies at different locations in each ganglion and morphologically different primary neurites in each ganglion (e.g., fast retractor unguis motor neurons), or (3) cell bodies at similar locations and morphologically similar primary neurites but with a functional switch in one ganglion relative to the function of the neurons in the other two ganglia. As an example of the latter, the morphology of the metathoracic slow extensor tibiae (SETi) motor neurons was similar to that of pro- and mesothoracic fast extensor tibiae (FETi) motor neurons. Similarly the metathoracic FETi bears a striking resemblance to the pro- and the mesothoracic SETi. It is proposed that in the metathoracic ganglion the two extensor tibiae motor neurons have switched functions while retaining similar morphologies relative to the structure and function of their pro- and mesothoracic serial homologues.  相似文献   

11.
The fast extensor tibiae (FETi) motor neuron is responsible for exciting the extensor tibiae muscle to produce most of the force for jumping in acridids. Because of its relatively large size and crucial role in jumping, FETi has been studied in an ever-increasing number of orthopteran species. Here we describe the structure of the metathoracic FETi neuron in six species of acridids and in two species of gryllids. The morphology of FETi within the respective groups is essentially equivalent, but marked differences are apparent between acridid and gryllid FETis. There are similarities in the size and location of the cell body and the course of the neurite through the ganglion. Differences are found in the number of large branches, density of branching, and the volume of neuropil receiving branches. We propose that the gryllid FETi is an intermediate form between slow extensor tibiae motor neurons involved in walking and acridid fast extensor tibiae motor neurons specialized for jumping.  相似文献   

12.
ABSTRACT. Rapid relaxation (shortening) of the femoral chordotonal organ in Cuniculina impigra Redtenbacher induces a depolarization followed by hyperpolarization of the fast and slow extensor tibiae motor neurons (FETi and SETi). The initial depolarization is caused by acceleration-sensitive units of the chordotonal organ. The reverse sequence of responses is induced in flexor motor neurons. The common inhibitor neuron (CI) is depolarized by both lengthening (stretch) and relaxation of the chordotonal organ.
The initial depolarization of FETi and SETi and the initial hyperpolarization of flexor motor neurons produced by rapid relaxation of the chordotonal organ and the depolarization of CI produced by lengthening of the chordotonal organ all oppose the resistance reflex response. However, these assisting components are weak compared to the resisting ones.  相似文献   

13.
The occurrence of salt‐, sugar‐sensitive neurones and a mechanoreceptor neurone in the antennal hair‐like gustatory sensilla of the click beetle Agriotes obscurus L. (Coleoptera, Elateridae) is demonstrated using the electrophysiological sensillum tip‐recording technique. The stimulating effect of 13 water soluble sugars at 100 mm is tested on the neurones of these sensilla. Sucrose and fructose are the two most stimulating sugars for the sugar‐sensitive neurone, evoking almost 30 spikes s?1 at 100 mm . The stimulating effect of arabinose, glucose, mannose, maltose and raffinose is three‐ to five‐fold lower, in the range 5.9–9.6 spikes s?1. The remaining six sugars, xylose, galactose, rhamnose, cellobiose, trehalose and lactose, have very low (<1 spikes s?1) or no ability to stimulate the sugar‐sensitive neurone. Concentration/response curves of the sugar‐sensitive neurone to sucrose, fructose and glucose at 0.01–100 mm overlap to a large extent in hibernating, cold reactivated and reproductively‐active beetles. A remarkable 9–50% decrease in the number of spikes evoked by 100 mm fructose and 10–100 mm sucrose occurs, however, in reproductively‐active beetles in June compared with beetles at the beginning of hibernation in October. These findings show that A. obscurus is capable of sensing a wide range sugars via their antennal gustatory sensilla.  相似文献   

14.
The locust jump consists of three distinct phases: Cocking: a rapid flexion of both hindleg tibia and locking of both tibia in full flexion. Co-contraction: simultaneous contractions in hindleg flexor and extensor muscles lasting about 0.5 s resulting in the storage of energy for the jump in elastic elements of the legs and muscles. Triggering: a sudden inhibition of flexor activity to allow the shortening of the contracted extensors and the release of the energy stored during the co-contraction phase. The neural circuitry controlling these three phases is now reasonably well understood. Some of its major features are: (1) pairs of large identifiable interneurons in the thoracic ganglia for evoking the cocking response (C-neurons) and for triggering the jump (M-neurons), (2) a central excitatory pathway from extensor to flexor tibiae motoneurons to ensure simultaneous activation of extensor and flexor motoneurons during the initial part of the co-contraction phase, (3) a positive feedback pathway from cuticular receptors to extensor motoneurons for maintaining extensor activity during the co-contraction phase, (4) proprioceptive feedback to the trigger interneurons for increasing their excitability during the co-contraction phase and thereby allowing a variety of external stimuli to activate the trigger neurons and evoke a jump, (5) presynaptic inhibition of visual pathways to the trigger neurons to ensure that the trigger neurons are not activated by the simultaneous occurrence of visual and auditory stimuli in the absence of proprioceptive input, and (6) a pair of multifunctional visual movement detecting neurons which can initiate cocking or trigger the jump depending on the animal's state.  相似文献   

15.
ABSTRACT. Four groups of campaniform sensilla are found on the trochanter of Cuniculina impigra Tedtenbacher (Phasmidae). One of these groups can be divided into two sub-groups. The sensilla are approximately parallel within each group or sub-group. As sensilla with parallel orientation will respond to the same direction of shear force, each group or sub-group of campaniform sensilla should act as one unit. When the coxa is fixed, activity in the nerve supplying the campaniform sensilla can be released by bending the femur forwards and backwards. The sensilla are sensitive to movement only in one direction. The investigated sensilla react to the stimulus with phasic-tonic discharge patterns. The dependence of the phasic component upon the velocity of the stimulus can be described by a power function. The tonic component depends on the amplitude of the stimulus. By mechanical stimulation of individual groups of sensilla it can be shown that at least two groups of campaniform sensilla contain units which respond to bending the femur backwards. The activity of some motor neurones can be influenced by slightly bending the leg in the horizontal plane. The levator trochanteris muscle is activated when the femur is bent forwards, and the frequency of the slow extensor tibiae motor neurone is increased when the femur is bent backwards. The reaction of both muscles is phasic. There is no detectable reaction in the protractor or the retractor of the coxa or the depressor trochanteris.  相似文献   

16.
The electrophysiological response of chemoreceptor neurones from the antennal chaetoid taste sensilla of the omnivorous ground beetle Pterostichus oblongopunctatus to several plant alkaloids and glucosides is investigated. A quinine‐sensitive neurone responding to quinine and quinine hydrochloride is found, most probably related to the granivorous feeding habit of P. oblongopunctatus. The response to quinine hydrochloride is concentration‐dependent at 0.001–50 mm , with the response threshold at 0.01 mm and a maximum rate of firing of 67 spikes/s at 50 mm . The stimulatory effect of caffeine is very weak, where the firing rate increases by only 1.4 spikes/s at a concentration of 10 mm compared with that evoked by a control stimulus. In addition, both quinine and quinine hydrochloride strongly inhibit spike production by the salt‐ and pH‐sensitive neurones when presented in mixtures with 10 mm NaCl. Several tested plant secondary compounds (i.e. salicin, sinigrin, caffeine and nicotine), which have only little or no effect on the firing rate of the quinine‐sensitive neurone, greatly reduce the responses of the salt‐ and pH‐sensitive neurones. The results of the present study suggest that the antennal taste sensilla of P. oblongopunctatus may detect plant defensive compounds both through the activation of a quinine‐sensitive neurone and via peripheral inhibition of other chemoreceptor neurones of the taste sensillum.  相似文献   

17.
To elucidate neural mechanisms underlying walking and jumping in insects, motor neurons supplying femoral muscles have been identified mainly in locusts and katydids, but not in crickets. In this study, the motor innervation patterns of the metathoracic flexor and extensor tibiae muscles in the cricket, Gryllus bimaculatus were investigated by differential back-fills and nerve recordings. Whereas the extensor tibiae muscle has an innervation pattern similar to that of other orthopterans, the flexor has an innervation unique to this species. The main body of the flexor muscle is divided into the proximal, middle and distal regions, which receive morphologically unique terminations from almost non-overlapping sets of motor neurons. The proximal region is innervated by about 12 moderate-sized excitatory motor neurons and two inhibitory neurons while the middle and distal regions are innervated by three and four large excitatory motor neurons, respectively. The most-distally located accessory flexor muscle, inserting on a common flexor apodeme with the main muscle, is innervated by at least four small excitatory (slow-type) and two common inhibitory motor neurons. The two excitatory and two inhibitory motor neurons that innervate the accessory flexor muscle also innervate the proximal bundles of the main flexor muscle. This suggests that the most proximal and distal parts of the flexor muscle participate synergistically in fine motor control while the rest participates in powerful drive of tibial flexion movement.  相似文献   

18.
The known nonlinearities of the femur-tibia control loop of the stick insect Carausius morosus (enabling the system to produce catalepsy) are already present in the nonspiking interneuron E4: (1) The decay of depolarizations in interneuron E4 following slow elongation movements of the femoral chordotonal organ apodeme could be described by a single exponential function, whereas the decay following faster movements had to be characterized by a double exponential function. (2) Each of the two corresponding time constants was independent of stimulus velocity. (3) The relative contribution of each function to the total amount of depolarization changed with stimulus velocity. (4) The characteristics described in (1)–(3) were also found in the slow extensor tibiae motoneuron. (5) Single electrode voltage clamp studies on interneuron E4 indicated that no voltage dependent membrane properties were involved in the generation of the observed time course of decay. Thus, we can trace back a certain behavior (catalepsy) to the properties of an identified, nonspiking interneuron.Abbrevations FETi fast extensor tibiae motor neuron - FT-joint femur-tibia joint - FT-control loop femur-tibia control loop - SETi slow extensor tibiae motor neuron - R regression coefficient  相似文献   

19.
The expression of both swimmeret and postural motor patterns in crayfish (Pacifastacus leniusculus) were affected by stimulation of a second root of a thoracic ganglion. The response of the swimmeret system depended on the state of the postural system. In most cases, the response of the swimmeret system outlasted the stimulus.Stimulation of a thoracic second root also elicited coordinated responses from the postural system, that outlasted the stimulus. In different preparations, either the flexor excitor motor neurones or the extensor excitor motor neurones were excited by this stimulation. In every case, excitation of one set of motor neurones was accompanied by inhibition of that group's functional antagonists.This stimulation seemed to coordinate the activity of both systems; when stimulation inhibited the flexor motor neurones, then the extensor motor neurones and the swimmeret system were excited. When stimulation excited the flexor motor neurones, then the extensor motor neurones and the swimmeret system were inhibited.Two classes of interneurones that responded to stimulation of a thoracic second root were encountered in the first abdominal ganglion. These interneurones could be the pathway that coordinates the response of the postural and swimmeret systems to stimulation of a thoracic second root.Abbreviations TSR thoracic second root - epsp excitatory post-synaptic potential - ipsp inhibitory post-synaptic potential - EJP excitatory jonctional potential - PS power-stroke - RS return-stroke - INT interneurone - N1 first segmental nerve - N2 second segmental nerve - N3 third segmental nerve - A1 abdominal ganglion 1  相似文献   

20.
Summary The development of the flight motor pattern was studied by recording from the thoracic muscles of locusts of various developmental stages. In response to a short wind stimulus, larval locusts generate unpatterned motor activity, whereas newly moulted adults generate the flight pattern (Fig. 1A). The latter is equivalent to the mature adult flight pattern, although more irregular and of lower frequency. Experiments with highly deafferentated locusts indicate that the switch from the larval tonic to adult phasic flight pattern and subsequent increase in frequency are not dependent on phasic peripheral feedback from moving body structures (Fig. 1B). By using octopamine, flight motor activity could be released without need of the wind stimulus (Fig. 2). This corresponded to the normal wind released flight pattern of intact locusts, although the frequency was lower (Fig. 8). Following octopamine treatment, the response to wind stimulation was enhanced. Wind then released in deafferentated adults long flight sequences of significantly elevated frequency (Fig. 3). Although flight is essentially an adult specific behaviour, octopamine was finally found to release flight motor activity in all larval stages (Fig. 7).We conclude that major steps in the development of the flight motor circuitry are completed by the end of embryogenesis. Thus, in contrast to previous assumptions (cf. Bentley and Hoy 1970; Kutsch 1974a; Altman 1975), postembryonic changes in neither the central, nor peripheral nervous system appear to be of major importance for the ontogeny of the locust flight motor program. Whether developmental changes in the wind sensory system of the head, or levels of neurohormones such as octopamine, are related to the newly acquired responsiveness of freshly moulted adult locusts to the normal flight releasing stimulus is discussed.  相似文献   

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