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Sexual dimorphism in the hoverfly motion vision pathway
Authors:Nordström Karin  Barnett Paul D  Moyer de Miguel Irene M  Brinkworth Russell S A  O'Carroll David C
Institution:Discipline of Physiology, School of Molecular and Biomedical Science, The University of Adelaide, SA, Australia. karin.nordstrom@adelaide.edu.au
Abstract:Many insects perform high-speed aerial maneuvers in which they navigate through visually complex surrounds. Among insects, hoverflies stand out, with males switching from stationary hovering to high-speed pursuit at extreme angular velocities 1]. In dipterans, 50-60 large interneurons -- the lobula-plate tangential cells (LPTCs) -- detect changes in optic flow experienced during flight 2-5]. It has been predicted that large LPTC receptive fields are a requirement of accurate "matched filters" of optic flow 6]. Whereas many fly taxa have three horizontal system (HS) LPTC neurons in each hemisphere, hoverflies have four 7], possibly reflecting the more sophisticated flight behavior. We here show that the most dorsal hoverfly neuron (HS north HSN]) is sexually dimorphic, with the male receptive field substantially smaller than in females or in either sex of blowflies. The (hoverfly-specific) HSN equatorial (HSNE) is, however, sexually isomorphic. Using complex optic flow, we show that HSN, despite its smaller receptive field, codes yaw velocity as well as HSNE. Responses to a target moving against a plain or textured background suggest that the male HSN could potentially play a role in target pursuit under some conditions.
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