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1.
Wing receptors of the cockroach have been studied using staining technique with methylene blue in living animals. Five types of the receptors were found: trychoid hairs, bristles, complaniform sensillae, chordotonal organs and multiterminal neurons. The majority of the receptors is located at the lower surface of the wing, especially along its ribs. Together with primitive features in the structure (polyneuronal origin of hairs and bristles, poor content of chordotonal organs, absence of distinct groups of companiform sensillae), some specialization of wing receptors with respect to flight function is noted (concentration of proprioceptors along the main mechanical axis of the wing and formation of distinct rows by the companiform sensillae).  相似文献   

2.
The electrical responses of the neurons associated with the various types of chemosensory hairs of the blowfly, Phormia regina Meigen, following stimulation by chemical and mechanical means have been studied. The singly innervated chemosensory hairs on the ovipositor, maxillary palpi, and antennae respond vigorously to chemical stimulation, but not to mechanical stimulation. The triply innervated chemosensory hairs on the labellum, tarsus, and wing have two neurons which respond only to chemical stimuli. The third neuron responds only to mechanical stimulation. The differential responses of the two chemosensory neurons to various chemical stimuli following the removal of the tip of the hair suggest that the structures responsible for chemoreception are located throughout the distal processes of these neurons. The response of the third neuron to mechanical stimulation is similar to the response recorded from the neuron associated with one type of tactile hair which responds to motion and not to steady deformation. Recordings have been made from the neurons associated with purely tactile hairs using the cut hair as an extension of the micropipette. The mechanosensory neuron of the wing chemosensory hair is capable of responding at the rate of at least 600 impulses per sec. and may serve to indicate changes in air flow over the wing surfaces during flight to enable the fly to correct the wing camber and attack angle.  相似文献   

3.
Mutations induced in Drosophila during space flight.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
To examine the possible effects of space radiation on living organisms, fruit flies Drosophila melanogaster were loaded on the US Space Shuttle Endeavour, and after the flight we have analyzed two types of mutations, sex-linked recessive lethal mutations induced in male reproductive cells and somatic mutations which give rise to morphological changes in hairs growing on the surface of wing epidermal cells. Wild type strains and a radiation-sensitive strain mei-41 were used. The frequencies of sex-linked recessive lethal mutations in flight groups were 2 and 3 times higher for wild type Canton-S and mei-41 strains, respectively, than those in ground control groups. By contrast, the frequencies of wing-hair somatic mutations differed little between flight and control groups. The possibility that the space environment causes mutations in certain types of cells such as male reproductive cells, is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Locust phase polymorphism is an extreme example of behavioral plasticity; in response to changes in population density, locusts dramatically alter their behavior. These changes in behavior facilitate the appearance of various morphological and physiological phase characteristics. One of the principal behavioral changes is the more intense flight behavior and improved flight performance of gregarious locusts compared to solitary ones. Surprisingly, the neurophysiological basis of the behavioral phase characteristics has received little attention. Here we present density‐dependent differences in flight‐related sensory and central neural elements in the desert locust. Using techniques already established for gregarious locusts, we compared the response of locusts of both phases to controlled wind stimuli. Gregarious locusts demonstrated a lower threshold for wind‐induced flight initiation. Wind‐induced spiking activity in the locust tritocerebral commissure giants (TCG, a pair of identified interneurons that relay input from head hair receptors to thoracic motor centers) was found to be weaker in solitary locusts compared to gregarious ones. The solitary locusts' TCG also demonstrated much stronger spike frequency adaptation in response to wind stimuli. Although the number of forehead wind sensitive hairs was found to be larger in solitary locusts, the stimuli conveyed to their flight motor centers were weaker. The tritocerebral commissure dwarf (TCD) is an inhibitory flight‐related interneuron in the locust that responds to light stimuli. An increase in TCD spontaneous activity in dark conditions was significantly stronger in gregarious locusts than in solitary ones. Thus, phase‐dependent differences in the activity of flight‐related interneurons reflect behavioral phase characteristics. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Neurobiol 57: 152–162, 2003  相似文献   

5.
Bats are the only mammals capable of true powered flight. The bat wing exhibits specializations, allowing these animals to perform complicated flight maneuvers like landing upside-down, and hovering. The wing membrane contains various tactile receptors, including hair-associated Merkel receptors that might be involved in stabilizing bat flight. Here, we studied the neuronal representation of the wing membrane in the primary somatosensory cortex (S1) of the anesthetized Big Brown Bat, Eptesicus fuscus, using tactile stimulation with calibrated monofilaments (von Frey hairs) while recording from multi-neuron clusters. We also measured cortical response thresholds to tactile stimulation of the wings.The body surface is mapped topographically across the surface of S1, with the head, foot, and wing being overrepresented. The orientation of the wing representation is rotated compared to the hand representaion of terrestrial mammals, confirming results from other bat species. Although different wing membrane parts derive embryologically from different body parts, including the flank (plagiopatagium), the tactile sensitivity of the entire flight membrane (0.2–1.2 mN) is remarkably close or even higher (dactylopatagium) than the average tactile sensitivity of the human fingertip.  相似文献   

6.
Additional weight due to contamination (water and/or contaminating particles) can potentially have a detrimental effect on the flight capabilities of large winged insects such as butterflies and dragonflies. Insects where the wing surface area-body mass ratio is very high will be even more susceptible to these effects. Water droplets tend to move spontaneously off the wing surface of these insects. In the case of the brown lacewing, the drops effectively encounter a dual bed of hair springs with a topographical structure which aids in the hairs resisting penetration into water bodies. In this article, we demonstrate experimentally how this protective defense system employed by the brown lacewing (Micromus tasmaniae) aids in resisting contamination from water and how the micro- and nanostructures found on these hairs are responsible for quickly shedding water from the wing which demonstrates an active liquid-repelling surface.  相似文献   

7.
Recordings were made from identified balancing system interneurones using implanted electrodes in crabs oscillated at 0.3 Hz during bouts of Parabolic flight. Repeatable non stabilized patterns of response firing were seen in head up and head down interneurones. During the hypergravity phases, the ratio of firing frequencies in the two directional categories of interneurones was altered showing that hypergravity produced effects normally seen during tilting of the crab, implying greater bending of the sensory thread hairs. During microgravity, firing levels remained low and constant or changed slowly towards initial firing levels.  相似文献   

8.
We develop a method that allows a flyer to estimate its own motion (egomotion), the wind velocity, ground slope, and flight height using only inputs from onboard optic flow and air velocity sensors. Our artificial algorithm demonstrates how it could be possible for flying insects to determine their absolute egomotion using their available sensors, namely their eyes and wind sensitive hairs and antennae. Although many behaviors can be performed by only knowing the direction of travel, behavioral experiments indicate that odor tracking insects are able to estimate the wind direction and control their absolute egomotion (i.e., groundspeed). The egomotion estimation method that we have developed, which we call the opto-aeronautic algorithm, is tested in a variety of wind and ground slope conditions using a video recorded flight of a moth tracking a pheromone plume. Over all test cases that we examined, the algorithm achieved a mean absolute error in height of 7% or less. Furthermore, our algorithm is suitable for the navigation of aerial vehicles in environments where signals from the Global Positioning System are unavailable.  相似文献   

9.
蝙蝠是一种唯一能够飞行的哺乳动物,其皮肤的超微结构尚未见报道。在电镜下观察了白边油蝠(Pipistrellus kuhlii)背部和翼膜皮肤的超微结构。表皮的厚度较低(10~12μm),角质层下有1~2层的刺细胞,该刺细胞由相似于鸟类无羽表皮的纤细角化细胞形成。颗粒层不连续且仅有少量小型透明角质颗粒(<0.3μm)。在翼膜的若干区域,表皮简化为一层与角质层相连的基底层。过渡期的角化细胞几乎不存在,提示其角质化过程非常迅速。基底膜上的无数半桥粒在真皮下面形成密集的附着点。大量胶原纤维直接维系在半桥粒和基底膜的致密层上,稀疏的弹性纤维使得蝙蝠表皮在飞行时易于伸展、在飞行后易于迅速折叠而不会受到损伤。与鸟类的表皮相似,蝙蝠角化细胞富有大量的脂质。由于脂质有助于蝙蝠皮肤在飞行中与冷空气流的传热绝缘,大量脂质的存在可能是为补偿蝙蝠翼膜的真皮缺乏厚的脂肪层。研究还表明,毛发较薄(4~7μm),并具有与皮层相似的突状物组成的精细表皮,其表皮细胞形成钩状抓握点使毛发紧紧粘结在一起,通过这种方式毛皮保持紧凑以恒定体温。  相似文献   

10.
Locust phase polymorphism is an extreme example of behavioral plasticity; in response to changes in population density, locusts dramatically alter their behavior. These changes in behavior facilitate the appearance of various morphological and physiological phase characteristics. One of the principal behavioral changes is the more intense flight behavior and improved flight performance of gregarious locusts compared to solitary ones. Surprisingly, the neurophysiological basis of the behavioral phase characteristics has received little attention. Here we present density-dependent differences in flight-related sensory and central neural elements in the desert locust. Using techniques already established for gregarious locusts, we compared the response of locusts of both phases to controlled wind stimuli. Gregarious locusts demonstrated a lower threshold for wind-induced flight initiation. Wind-induced spiking activity in the locust tritocerebral commissure giants (TCG, a pair of identified interneurons that relay input from head hair receptors to thoracic motor centers) was found to be weaker in solitary locusts compared to gregarious ones. The solitary locusts' TCG also demonstrated much stronger spike frequency adaptation in response to wind stimuli. Although the number of forehead wind sensitive hairs was found to be larger in solitary locusts, the stimuli conveyed to their flight motor centers were weaker. The tritocerebral commissure dwarf (TCD) is an inhibitory flight-related interneuron in the locust that responds to light stimuli. An increase in TCD spontaneous activity in dark conditions was significantly stronger in gregarious locusts than in solitary ones. Thus, phase-dependent differences in the activity of flight-related interneurons reflect behavioral phase characteristics.  相似文献   

11.

Analyses of the pollen contents of the crop and intestine of 11 species of New Zealand Syrphidae . showed that small, sparsely haired hover‐flies with unbranched hairs, short, simple bristles, and a short proboscis had ingested at least 99% anemophilous pollens, and that larger, more hairy hover‐flies with pollen‐collecting hairs, long, spirally grooved bristles, and elongate mouthparts had ingested pollens almost exclusively from nectar‐bearing flowers. Pollen‐feeding behaviour was studied in one hairy species, the drone‐fly Eristalis tenax, and in one sparsely‐haired species, Melanostoma fasciatum. Using granulated charcoal as a substitute for pollen, it was found that in E. tenax particles trapped among the body hairs are combed off by the front and hind tibiae and transferred to pollen‐retaining bristles on the front and hind tarsi respectively. Particles retained among the front tarsal bristles are ingested directly from the bristles. Those retained by the hind tarsi are transferred in flight by leg‐scraping movements to the front tarsi, from which they are subsequently eaten. E. tenax also eats pollen directly from anthers. In M. fasciatum apparently all the pollen ingested is taken directly from anther lobes or stigmas. The few pollen grains that adhere to the body of this species are combed off by the front and hind tibiae and transferred to the front and hind tarsi, but are not retained there because the bristles are short and simple. The mouthparts, hairs, and bristles of E. tenax and M. fasciatum are illustrated. Drawings of leg movements associated with pollen collection and ingestion, and photographs showing leg scraping in E. tenax are included. Morphological similarities between drone‐flies and honey‐bees, previously regarded as the result of mimicry, can be explained by convergent evolution in response to similar food‐gathering behaviour. Probably the majority of Syrphidae, and also the related Acroceridae, collect pollen by means of branched or curly‐tipped hairs.  相似文献   

12.
The "starch‐statolith" hypothesis has been used by plant physiologists to explain the gravity perception mechanism in higher plants. In order to help resolve some of the controversy associated with ground‐based research that has supported this theory, we performed a spaceflight experiment during the January 1997 mission of the Space Shuttle STS‐81. Seedlings of wild‐type (WT) Arabidopsis , two reduced‐starch strains, and a starchless mutant were grown in microgravity and then given a gravity stimulus on a centrifuge. In terms of development in space, germination was greater than 90% for seeds in microgravity, and flight seedlings were smaller (60% in total length) compared to control plants grown on the ground and to control plants on a rotating clinostat. Seedlings grown in space had two structural features that distinguished them from the controls: a greater density of root hairs and an anomalous hypocotyl hook structure. However, the slower growth and morphological changes observed in the flight seedlings may be due to the effects of ethylene present in the spacecraft. Nevertheless, during the flight, hypocotyls of WT seedlings responded to a unilateral 60‐min stimulus provided by a 1‐ g centrifuge while those of the starch‐deficient strains did not. Thus, the strain with the greatest amount of starch responded to the stimulus given in‐flight, and, therefore, these data support the starch‐statolith model for gravity sensing.  相似文献   

13.
Three descending brain interneurons (DNI, DNM, DNC) are described from Locusta migratoria. All are paired, dorsally situated neurons, with soma in the protocerebrum, input dendrites in the proto- and deuterocerebrum, and a single axon running to the metathoracic ganglion and sometimes further. In DNI the soma and all cerebral arborizations lie ipsilateral to the axon. Discrete regions of arborization lie in the ipsilateral and medial ocellar tracts, the midprotocerebrum and the deuterocerebrum. In the other ganglia the axon branches only ipsilaterally, principally laterally in the flight motor neuropil but also towards the midline. DNC is similarly organized to DNI, but the cell crosses the midline in the brain. Soma, the single projection into a lateral ocellar tract, and the midprotocerebral arborization all lie contralateral to the axon. The deuterocerebral arborization is, however, ipsilateral to the axon. The pattern of projections in the remaining ganglia resembles that of DNI. The soma and all cerebral arborizations of DNM lie ipsilateral to the axon. The arborization is only weakly subdivided into protocerebral, deuterocerebral and medial ocellar tract regions. In the remaining ganglia the arborization extends bilaterally to similar areas of both left and right flight motor neuropil. A table of synonymy is given, equating the various names used for these neurons by previous authors. The morphology correlates well with the known input and output connections. They respond physiologically to deviations from the normal flight posture mediated by ocelli, eyes and wind hairs and connect to the thoracic flight apparatus.  相似文献   

14.
棉属茎,叶表皮毛的研究   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
棉属植物茎、叶表皮毛的多少及其形态是识别种或品种的主要特征之一,并且与种或品种的抗虫或抗逆性有密切联系。Ramey(1962)研究指出,多毛性状是受 H_1和H_2两个主效基因和一些修饰基因的控制,H_2具有多效性。较系统地研究棉属茎、叶表皮毛的性状报道较少。本文报道利用扫描电镜对棉属植物的茎、叶表皮毛性状观察的结果。  相似文献   

15.
To examine possible effects of space radiation on living organism, we have analyzedtwo types of mutations, sex-linked recessive lethal mutations and somatic mutations, in fruit fly of the species Drosophila melanogaster. Drosophila strains used were wild type strains and a radiation-sensitive strain mei-41. Two different developmental stages of samples were sent into space; young adult males to analyze sex-linked recessive lethal mutations and about 30hr-old larvae to detect somatic mutations in wing epidermal cells. For wild type and mei-41 strains each, about 200 adult male flies and about 6,000 larvae were loaded on space shuttle Endeavour. The male flies returned from space were mated to virgin female flies of a tester strain, and the presence of the lethal mutations was analyzed at F2 generation. The frequencies of sex-linked recessive lethal mutations in flight groups were 2 and 3 times higher for wild type Canton-S and mei-4 1, respectively, than those in ground control groups. Most larvae sent to space emerged as adult flies within about 10 days after the landing. The presence of wing-hair somatic mutations, which give morphological change in hairs growing on the surface of wing epidermal cells, was analyzed under microscope. In wild type strain Muller-5, the frequency of wing hair mutant spots in flight group was about 1.5-fold higher than that in ground control, and in Canton-S-derived wild type strain the frequencies were similar between the two groups. By contrast, for mei-41 strain the mutation frequency was lower in flight group than in control group. The observed higher frequency of lethal mutations in the flight group might be due to a possibility that radiation effects on reproductive cells could be greatly enhanced under micro gravity. However, if this would be the case, we do not have appropriate explanation for the apparent absence of such synergistic effects on somatic wing-hair mutation system.  相似文献   

16.
Summary The blowfly Calliphora has a mobile head and various, presumably proprioceptive, sense organs in the neck region. The prosternal organs are a pair of mechanosensory hair fields, each comprising ca. 110 sensilla. We studied their structure (Figs. 2–4), kinematics (Figs. 5, 6) and, after surgery, their influence on head posture (Figs. 7–11) in order to reveal their specific function.The hair sensilla are structurally polarized, all in roughly the same direction, and are stimulated by dorsoventral bending of the hairs (Figs. 3, 4). This occurs indirectly by flap-movements of two contact sclerites (Figs. 3, 6); they move in the same direction during pitch turns of the head, in opposite directions during roll turns, and barely at all during yaw turns of the head (Fig. 5).Bending and arresting all hairs of one field elicits a head roll bias to the non-operated side (Fig. 7) during tethered flight in visually featureless surroundings. In contrast, shaving all hairs of one field elicits a head roll to the operated side (Figs. 8–10). The surgically induced bias of head posture is not compensated within three days (Fig. 10). Our results show that the prosternal organs of Calliphora sense pitch and roll turns of the fly's head, and control at least its roll position.Abbreviations HP° TP° angular positions of the sagittal planes of the fly's head and thorax, respectively, relative to an external reference - HR° = HP — TP head roll angle of the fly's head relative to its thorax, HR>0° for clockwise head roll, looking in flight direction - N number of flies - n number of measurements - PO prosternal organ - SD standard deviation - SEM standard error of the mean  相似文献   

17.
The heads of flies were passively turned during fixed flight (open loop conditions). The turning stimuli had ramp-shaped onsets. The resulting torque produced by the thorax was plotted as a function of the degree of head-turn.Directional, passive turns of the head evoke active turning tendencies (yawing forces) of the same sign from the thorax. The strength of these tendencies is dependent on the size of the given angle through which the head was turned. The cushion of sensory hairs on the neck (prosternal organ) is very important in the elicitation of the turning tendencies. The results which have been obtained indicate that the position of the fly's head has a substantial influence on the magnitude of the turning tendencies elicited by visual stimuli.  相似文献   

18.
Information from multiple sensory systems is likely combined to provide guidance for male muscoid flies engaged in aerial pursuit of females. To specify the female’s position to the thoracic flight motor, head-centered visual information should be integrated with propriosensory information about head position relative to the thorax because the flies’ heads are flexible around the neck. Head position is encoded by a proprioceptive organ in the ventral neck membrane. We determined in the flesh fly Neobellieria bullata (Sarcophagidae) that accurate propriosensory information is necessary for aerial capture of females by shaving mechanosensory hairs from the organ in male flies and competing them against their sham operated brothers in pursuits of virgin females. We also determined that normal male flies are not successful at capturing females until the second day post-eclosion.  相似文献   

19.
The insect wing membrane is usually covered by scales, hairs, and acanthae, which serve diverse functions, such as species-specific coloration pattern, decrease of wind resistance during flight or decrease of wing wettability. Representatives of Palaeoptera (Odonata and Ephemeroptera) have no hairy structures on the wing membrane, but both its sides are fine-sculptured. In this study, the nature of the wing covering was studied using acoustic microscopy, scanning- and transmission electron microscopy followed by a variety of chemical treatments. It was shown that wing microsculptures are not cuticular outgrowths, but a wax covering, which is similar to pruinosity, which has been previously described in several odonate taxa. Data from scanning acoustic microscopy revealed that scratches on the wax covering have material density different from the surrounding material. Various functions of the wax covering are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Treatment of excessive hair growth is an important issue in both dermatological and cosmetic practice. In contrast to treatments with medication, most physical methods are treatments that focus on the hair follicle. To obtain insight in the failure behavior of the anchorage of hairs, hairs were extracted (in vitro) from pig skin at a speed of 0.1mm/s, one at a time. The pulling force and tweezers displacement were recorded. The extracted hairs were classified with respect to the phase in the growing cycle: anagen (growing phase), telogen (resting phase) or other (catagen phase or unable to determine). The anagen hairs showed a different relation between the tweezers displacement and the pulling force than the telogen hairs. Moreover, the maximum force that could be applied before a hair was extracted proved to be lower for anagen hairs than for telogen hairs (0.36N, 1.8N, respectively). The extracted hair length, defined as the part of the hair that had been embedded in the skin which was extracted, was higher for anagen hairs than for telogen hairs (4.8mm, 3.0mm, respectively). Removing proximal skin tissue and the embedded parts of the anagen hair (root) resulted in a change of the extraction curves. The results indicate that two phenomena play a role in the anchorage of anagen hairs. We have proposed a model for the extraction of an anagen hair that has been based on these results: first the interface between hair and skin that is located around the inner root sheath (IRS) starts to fail, followed by failing of the hair itself in the region where the hair keratinizes.  相似文献   

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