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Behavioral analysis of two distinct visual responses in the larva of the tiger beetle (Cicindela chinensis)
Authors:A. Mizutani  Y. Toh
Affiliation:(1) Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, Kyushu University, Fukuoka 812-8581 Japan Fax: +81-92 642-2645 e-mail: yotohscb@mbox.nc.kyushu-u.ac.jp, JP
Abstract:The tiger beetle larva shows two distinct visual responses, a predatory jump and an evasive withdrawal into the burrow (escape). In the present study the visual stimuli controlling these two responses have been behaviorally analyzed in the larva of Cicindela chinensis. The threshold size needed for a target to elicit both responses is a visual angle of 5–7°. The velocities of moving targets needed to elicit the responses are 0.4–33° s−1 for the jump and 0.76–90° s−1 for the escape. Choice between the two responses appears to be controlled by the actual target size rather than by the angular size. It also appears to be controlled by the target height. As the height of the target increases, the probability for the jump decreases, whereas the probability for the escape increases. Response properties of the larva with only a single functional stemma, the other stemmata being occluded, are different from those of the intact larva, which suggests cooperation of at least two stemmata for the release of different visual responses. Visual responses of the one-stemma larva still vary, however, with target size and target height, which suggests the visual responses are partially controlled even by a single stemma. Although our data do not resolve these conflicting results, more than one stemma is necessary for a firm choice between the two responses. Accepted: 13 May 1997
Keywords:Tiger beetle larva  Stemma  Visual responses  Behavior
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