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Host-foraging stable flies,Stomoxys calcitrans,are preferentially attracted to objects with both visual and thermal host-like characteristics
Authors:Emmanuel Hung  Nelson Lee  Eve Meyer  Tandeep Brar  Geoffrey Ng  Gerhard Gries
Institution:1. Department of Biological Sciences, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada;2. Department of Biological Sciences, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada

Contribution: ?Investigation (supporting), Methodology (supporting);3. Department of Biological Sciences, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada

Contribution: ?Investigation (supporting)

Abstract:Many haematophagous insects use the heat emitted by warm-blooded animals as a cue for locating suitable hosts. Blood-feeding stable flies, Stomoxys calcitrans (L.) (Diptera: Muscidae), are known to respond to visual and olfactory host cues. However, the effects of thermal host cues on the foraging behaviour of these flies remain largely unknown. Here we tested the hypothesis that host-foraging stable flies preferentially land on objects with host-like temperature, and on objects with both visual and thermal host-like cues. In laboratory bioassays, stable flies were offered a choice between paired temperature-controlled copper discs. Flies preferentially landed on the disc with a host-like temperature (40 °C), discriminating against discs that were cooler (26 or 35 °C) or warmer (50 or 60 °C) than vertebrate hosts. Flies that were well fed and thus not in foraging mode, or host-foraging flies that were offered infrared radiation but not the conductive and convective heat of different temperature discs, failed to discriminate between the stimuli. In greenhouse experiments, when flies were offered a choice between paired barrels as surrogate hosts, flies preferentially landed on barrels that were both thermally and visually appealing (38–39 °C, black), discriminating against barrels that were cold (10 °C), white, or both cold and white. Thermal cues augmented the overall landing responses of flies but their initial (mid-range) attraction to barrels was mediated by visual cues. Overall, the data suggest that thermal host cues affect the host-foraging behaviour of stable flies primarily at close range, prompting landing on a host.
Keywords:Diptera  foraging behaviour  haematophagous insect  heat  host cues  host location  infrared radiation  laboratory bioassays  Muscidae  thermal cues  thermoreception  visual cues
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