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1.
As flash signaling patterns of fireflies are species specific, signal‐pattern analysis is important for understanding this system of communication. Here, we present time‐lapse image analysis (TiLIA), a free open‐source software package for signal and flight pattern analyses of fireflies that uses video‐recorded image data. TiLIA enables flight path tracing of individual fireflies and provides frame‐by‐frame coordinates and light intensity data. As an example of TiLIA capabilities, we demonstrate flash pattern analysis of the fireflies Luciola cruciata and L. lateralis during courtship behavior.  相似文献   

2.
In Japan, Tatsuno Town has been famous for many Luciola cruciata fireflies emerging every summer at least since the 1920s. However, in the 1960s, L. cruciata fireflies were intentionally introduced from the Lake Biwa area into Matsuo-kyo, the most famous habitat of fireflies in that town. In this study, I examined ambient temperatures and flash rates of L. cruciata at four sites including Matsuo-kyo in the Tatsuno area and two sites in the Lake Biwa area. The linear regression of flash rates on temperatures indicated that the Matsuo-kyo population was distinct from the other three populations native to the Tatsuno area, but similar to the two populations native to the Lake Biwa area in terms of flash rates. These results were also supported by a recent molecular biological study, suggesting that the introduced fireflies had a strong ecological impact on the native ones at Matsuo-kyo. The present study emphasizes that we should not transport and release L. cruciata fireflies without careful consideration.  相似文献   

3.
Long‐term observations of adult populations of the aquatic Genji firefly, Luciola cruciata (Coleoptera: Lampyridae), were conducted using a simple flash counting method from 1975 to 2006 at four locations in Kyoto City, Japan. The relative population sizes of adult L. cruciata at these sites fluctuated almost synchronously, indicating the influence of large‐scale environmental phenomena such as weather conditions on population dynamics. Rainfall in September and the latter half of July caused a significant decrease in the population size. The frequent rainfall during these months may have caused considerable drift in the emergence of early instars of firefly larvae and a decrease in their foraging activity.  相似文献   

4.
Continuous synchronic flashing occurs in stationary and flying male congregations of members of some firefly species in Southeast Asia. In the present paper, low-light videography and photometry was used to demonstrate that synchrony occurs in the North American genus Photuris. We found that the Georgia coastal plain firefly Ph. frontalis flashed synchronically. From a distance, the synchronic flashes of a population of flying Ph. frontalis appeared to occur in a continuous synchrony. However, when pairs of males were viewed, it was difficult to verify that their flashing was continuously synchronic. In the laboratory, caged fireflies flashed synchronically, stopped, and then flashed synchronically again. To study this flash behavior, recordings of individual and group flashing were analyzed statistically to validate the conclusions about rhythm and synchrony. Although the mass synchrony appeared continuous, the individual flying males switch on and off, coming in again on the beat. The synchrony in Ph. frontalis is common and pervasive rather than rare and sporadic, as shown by other North American fireflies. The precision of the frontalis synchrony approaches that of Southeast Asian fireflies. The intermittent synchrony of this firefly reinforces the evidence that there is a diversity of synchronies in fireflies.  相似文献   

5.
Synchronous flashing has been described for some Southeast Asian fireflies but has rarely been reported in North American fireflies. Our field observations indicated thatPhotinus carolinus flash synchronously. The flash pattern of individualP. carolinus was characterized by a burst of five to eight flashes over a period of approximately 4 s. These flash bursts were repeated about every 12 s. Groups of fireflies comprised individuals exhibiting this species-specific flash pattern. Remarkably, members of the group flashed synchronously: Flash bursts started and stopped at the same time and the flashes among individuals occurred at the same time as well. We used low-light level videography to examine this behavior in caged groups of (3 or 10) fireflies for synchronic flashing. The occurrence of concurrent rhythmic group flashing satisfies the criteria for synchrony as defined by Buck (1988). The intermittent nature of the bursts of flashes shown byP. carolinus makes this a discontinuous synchrony. The mechanisms underlying discontinuous synchrony are not known.  相似文献   

6.
Aim We infer the biogeography and colonization history of a dispersal‐limited terrestrial vertebrate, the Japanese four‐lined ratsnake (Elaphe quadrivirgata), to reveal the number of times mainland populations have invaded the Izu Archipelago of Japan, the mainland sources of these colonists, and the time‐scale of colonization. We compare these results with those of past studies in an attempt to uncover general biogeographical patterns. Moreover, we briefly examine the significance of colonization history when evaluating the evolution of body size and melanism of the Izu Island E. quadrivirgata populations. Location The Izu Islands (Oshima, Toshima, Niijima, Shikine, Kozu, Tadanae and Mikura), a volcanic archipelago off the Pacific coast of central Japan. Methods We obtained DNA sequences of the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene (1117 base pairs) from 373 individual snakes sampled from seven of the Izu Islands and 25 mainland localities. We employed partitioned Bayesian phylogenetic analyses assuming a relaxed molecular clock to estimate phylogenetic relationships among extant haplotypes and to give an explicit temporal scale to the timing of clade divergence, colonization history and tempo of body‐size evolution. Moreover, we employed model‐based biogeographical analysis to calculate the minimum number of times E. quadrivirgata colonized the Izu Islands. Results We found evidence that three separate regions of the Izu Archipelago have been colonized independently from mainland ancestors within the past 0.58–0.20 Ma. The Izu Peninsula plus Oshima and Mikura were both colonized independently from lineages inhabiting eastern mainland Japan. The Toshima, Niijima, Shikine, Kozu and Tadanae populations all derive from a single colonization from western mainland Japan. Oshima has been subject to three or possibly four colonizations. Main conclusions These results support the hypothesis that the extreme body‐size disparity among island populations of this ratsnake evolved in situ. Moreover, the fact that the dwarf, melanistic population inhabiting Oshima descends from multiple mainland colonization events is evidence of an extremely strong natural selection pressure resulting in the rapid evolution of this unique morphology. These results contrast with theoretical predictions that natural selection pressures should play a decreased role on islands close to the mainland and/or subject to frequent or recent immigration.  相似文献   

7.
《Animal behaviour》1988,36(6):1809-1815
The untested idea that wolf spiders such as Lycosa rabida rely on visual cues when preying on fireflies at night was examined. Under controlled conditions, individuals of L. rabida and L. punctulata were exposed to both actual and simulated firefly flashing. These stimuli elicited orientation or approach in only 24% of the spiders. In other experiments, constant light yielded more responses than did flash patterns, and a stationary light elicited more responses than did a moving light. Both of these findings suggest that phototaxis underlies the responses. To determine the importance of vibratory cues, crawling fireflies were offered to blinded spiders on a paper substratum and on living plants; response levels were 85% and 100%, respectively. These data suggest that much, if not most, nocturnal predation by lycosid spiders on fireflies involves vibratory rather than visual stimuli.  相似文献   

8.
Synchronous flashing occurs in certain species of SoutheastAsian and North American fireflies. Most Southeast Asian synchronyinvolves stationary congregating fireflies, but North Americansynchrony occurs in flying fireflies that do not congregate.Southeast Asian synchrony is usually continuous, but North Americansynchrony is interrupted. Photuris frontalis, the only memberof the North American genus Photuris to synchronize, shows anintermittent synchrony. This involves synchronization and repeatedre-synchronizations while in flight. The precision that occursat the start of synchrony was studied in Ph. frontalis usingcaged fireflies and photometry. Barrier experiments (using twofireflies) or flash entrainment experiments (using one LED andone firefly) were performed to measure the temporal precisionof the first entrained flash. In both cases, the first entrainedflash was close to unison synchrony (phase = 1.0) and showedlittle variability. The behavioral implications of the abilityto synchronize with the first entrained flash are not known,but it might facilitate male-male interactions during brief,transient encounters such as maintaining distance between closelyflying males in search of females.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Physiological Links in Firefly Flash Code Evolution   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
New and reassessed neurophysiological observations on dialog fireflies permit (1) parsimonious inferences about the origin and fixation of light emission in the primeval firefly, (2) proof of widespread involvement of a stable species-specific minimal stimulus–response interval in timed flashing behaviors of both genders, (3) strengthening of the evidence for certain normally latent flash control intervals common to both male and female, (4) assignment of possible roles in the evolution of time-coded courting dialog to these data, and (5) evaluation of the evolutionary status of certain present-day species.  相似文献   

11.
North American Photinus fireflies use bioluminescent flashes to communicate an individual’s species and sex, and to attract potential mates. A female firefly responds to a male firefly’s courtship flash with her own species-specific flash. We used a photic stimulator to produce male-like species-specific P. carolinus LED courtship flashes. These evoked species-specific response flashes from a female. The female’s flashes were preceded by a flash gesture comprising a sequence of abdominal postural adjustments (pitch, roll, and yaw). These gestures changed her lantern’s orientation which, at rest, was downward towards the substrate. Our results demonstrate that these gestures mediate a lateralization of the female’s response flashes towards the direction of the stimulating LED. That is, she directs her response to the left of midline when stimuli are presented from her left, and similarly, she directs her response to the right of midline when stimuli are presented from her right. The directional aspect of the flash gesture adds a new perspective to the complexity of the behaviors associated with flash communication in fireflies. Lateralization of the flash gesture suggests that the female’s visual system processes information about the location of male’s flashes as well as their temporal pattern.  相似文献   

12.
Aim The main Japanese islands are land‐bridge islands divided by the biogeographic division Blakiston’s Line and represent two natural laboratories for studying land‐bridge diversification. Colonization of the current mammal fauna has been dated to the middle to late Pleistocene using fossil evidence. The purpose of this paper is to apply a molecular clock to the genetic divergences between Japanese mammalian taxa and their sister mainland taxa to test the late Pleistocene land‐bridge colonization hypothesis. Location The main Japanese islands (Kyushu, Shikoku, Honshu and Hokkaido). Methods I used mitochondrial DNA (cytochrome b) and a species tree approach to estimate the divergence times of 24 Japanese non‐volant terrestrial mammal taxa and their mainland sister taxa using the program *beast . I then tested for evidence of non‐simultaneous divergence among these taxon‐pairs by controlling for expected coalescent stochasticity using the program Ms Bayes . Results Divergence events between taxa on Japan and their mainland sister taxa were significantly older than expected under the current paradigm, which is based on fossil data. Consistent with the land‐bridge colonization hypothesis, there was evidence of multiple divergence events. Main conclusions These results implicate a colonization timeframe that is older than posited by the current paradigm based on fossil evidence. However, these results are still consistent with the land‐bridge colonization hypothesis. Multiple periods of land‐bridge connectivity may account for the current mammalian fauna in Japan. In addition, half of the divergence time estimates in the Honshu–Shikoku–Kyushu region were clumped around 2.4 Ma, which might suggest a dramatic interchange period, concordant with a period of significant global cooling, when the first land bridge may have connected Japan to the mainland.  相似文献   

13.
A gall midge that induces thick lenticular galls on leaflets of Pueraria species (Fabaceae) in Japan, mainland China, Taiwan and South Korea is described as Pitydiplosis puerariae sp. nov. (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae). Tanaostigmodes puerariae (Hymenoptera: Tanaostigmatidae), described earlier from mainland China as an inducer of the lenticular gall, is regarded to be an inquiline. Pitydiplosis puerariae is distinguishable from the only known congener, the Nearctic Pitydiplosis packardi, by the male genitalia with entire aedeagus and with hypoproct that is as long as cerci and bilobed with a U‐shaped emargination. DNA sequencing data indicate the existence of three genetically different intraspecific groups: (i) “YNT‐montana group” induces galls on Pueraria montana on the Yaeyama Islands, Japan and in northern Taiwan; (ii) “CT‐montana group” on P. montana in central Taiwan; (iii) and “JCK‐lobata group” on Pueraria lobata in mainland China, South Korea and Japan north of Okinoerabu Island. A possible diversification scenario of the three groups is hypothesized based on DNA sequencing data and geohistorical information. A distribution gap of the gall midge on five islands between Tokunoshima and Ishigaki Islands, Japan was confirmed by intensive field surveys. Ecological traits and adult behavior of Pity. puerariae are also described. Its possibility as a potential biological control agent against P. lobata seems counter‐indicated.  相似文献   

14.
We sampled a population of signalingPhoturis versicolor quadrifulgens fireflies to quantify the variation in flash patterns emitted by males. Males produced five distinct flash patterns during their mate-searching flights. Four of the patterns consisted of two to five equal-intensity pulses and the fifth pattern type was a flicker, a group of rapid modulations in intensity. We found that the proportions of each pattern remained relatively constant from night to night throughout the season. The different flash patterns produced varied significantly with time of night; patterns having fewer pulses occurred earlier in the evening. Local density, an estimate of competition, did not significantly correlate with flash pattern type. On consecutive emissions, individuals changed their flash types with a mean probability of 0.12 (over all males), and they usually switched between patterns differing by a single pulse (from a two- to a three-pulse pattern, from a three- to a two-pulse pattern, etc.). The nightly temporal changes in flash patterns may be related to tradeoffs between female availability and energetic costs of signaling or the changes may be related to increased predation risk from visual predators. Photuris versicolor quadrifulgens was originally described by Barber (1951) as a subspecies ofP. versicolor. The genusPhoturis is currently under revision by Dr. James E. Lloyd, and this firefly will be given species status.  相似文献   

15.
The flash code of Photinus macdermotti fireflies has been measured over a temperature range of 16 to 25°C. The code changes in characteristics fashion during different phases of firefly courtship. Males produce rhythmic patrolling flashes while flying, and when answered, shift to courtship flash pairs of significantly shorter interval. Females will answer some consecutive patrolling flashes and normally respond after the second flash of each male courtship pair. A possible behavioural role for the shifting of male patrolling and courtship flash intervals and for the female's response patterns is proposed.  相似文献   

16.
Japanese fireflies of the subfamily Luciolinae are biochemically analyzed using 13 allozymes, and the phylogenetic relationships obtained from this analysis are compared with their flash communication systems. As a result, the Japanese Luciolinae can be divided into three groups.Hotaria parvula andH. tsushimana together withLuciola yayeyamana andL. kuroiwae from the first group, and they use the same communication system.L. lateralis, Curtos okinawana, andC. costipennis make up the second group, and their communication systems are also the same.L. cruciata makes up the last one, and its communication system is different from the other fireflies of Luciolinae. Therefore, their taxonomical arrangement and communication systems are not congruent. However, the genetic similarity deduced by allozymic analysis of the members of the Japanese Luciolinae is highly consistent with their flash communication systems.  相似文献   

17.
Animal communication is an intriguing topic in evolutionary biology. In this comprehensive study of visual signal evolution, we used a phylogenetic approach to study the evolution of the flash communication system of North American fireflies. The North American firefly genus Photinus contains 35 described species with simple ON–OFF visual signals, and information on habitat types, sympatric congeners, and predators. This makes them an ideal study system to test hypotheses on the evolution of male and female visual signal traits. Our analysis of 34 Photinus species suggests two temporal pattern generators: one for flash duration and one for flash intervals. Reproductive character displacement was a main factor for signal divergence in male flash duration among sympatric Photinus species. Male flash pattern intervals (i.e., the duration of the dark periods between signals) were positively correlated with the number of sympatric Photuris fireflies, which include predators of Photinus. Females of different Photinus species differ in their response preferences to male traits. As in other communication systems, firefly male sexual signals seem to be a compromise between optimizing mating success (sexual selection) and minimizing predation risk (natural selection). An integrative model for Photinus signal evolution is proposed.  相似文献   

18.
Gypsy moth populations from Japan, mainland Asia, Europe, Tunisia, and North America were analyzed for variation in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequences from three gene regions. These samples resolve into four groups, representing gypsy moths from (1) Okinawa, Japan, (2) Hokkaido, Japan, (3) Honshu and Kyushu, Japan and mainland Asia, and (4) Europe, Tunisia, and North America. Some patterns of geographic variation observed for mtDNA (for example, the distinctiveness of gypsy moths from Hokkaido, Japan) coincide with those observed by Goldschmidt from analyses of morphology, life history, and intersexuality. Other patterns (relative sequence homogeneity across Asia, Honshu, and Kyushu and reduced levels of variation in mainland Japan) do not.  相似文献   

19.
Photometric recordings combined with computer stimulation, acquisition and analysis were used to study synchrony in the North American fireflyPhotinus carolinus. A computer-generated burst of simulatedP. carolinus flashes was used to trigger a firefly flash burst. We found that the first triggered firefly flashes occurred after the second or third flashes in the stimulus burst, that there were fewer flashes in a triggered burst than a spontaneous burst, and that extending the stimulus flashes into the firefly's interburst interval inhibited firefly flashing. When the stimulus flash interval (389–560 ms) was changed, no change was seen in the interflash interval. When the stimulus flash interval was changed, the average time between stimulus flash and firefly flash (flash delay) changed as if the firefly interflash interval was constant. Thus, interflash interval inP. carolinus does not change its length, making it similar to the Southeast Asian synchronizerPteroptyx cribellata and different fromPteroptyx malaccae, which can change its interval. We suspect that the time between bursts is functionally analogous to the time between flashes in Southeast Asian synchronizers.  相似文献   

20.
Abstract.  1. Two types of Genji firefly, Luciola cruciata , have been recognised on the basis of the inter-flash interval.
2. The fast-flash and slow-flash type fireflies, distributed in the western and eastern parts of Japan, exhibit a 2- and 4-s interval of bioluminescence flash, respectively. In addition, an intermediate-flash type is found on the boundary between these two regions.
3. The differences in the responses of the males of four field populations to different intervals of artificial flashes were examined.
4. The results revealed that in the Aomori and Sendai populations (slow-flash type), a significantly larger number of males approached the 4- and 5-s flash intervals than approached the 2- and 3-s intervals of artificial flashes. On the other hand, in the Ohtsu population (fast-flash type), a significantly larger number of males approached the 2- and 3-s flash intervals than the 4- and 5-s intervals of artificial flashes. The Inuyama population (intermediate-flash type) did not show any particular preferences to flash intervals.
5. This study shows that in firefly populations, geographic variation in flash pattern can cause some degree of pre-mating isolation between populations.  相似文献   

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