Collective orientation by nocturnally migrating Australian plague locusts, Chortoicetes terminifera (Walker) (Orthoptera: Acrididae): a radar study
- 1 December 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Bulletin of Entomological Research
- Vol. 73 (4) , 679-692
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0007485300009287
Abstract
The collective orientation of Chortoicetes terminifera (Wlk.) migrating at night in New South Wales was studied with a radar. Measurements of the distribution of insect echoes on the radar's plan-position-indicator display provide information about the variation of both the direction and the degree of orientation with both height and time. A quantitative analysis procedure used in a detailed study of one particularly interesting series of observations is described. It was found that collective orientation occurred frequently, and that it sometimes became very well-developed. The direction of orientation remained approximately constant for long periods, but did not appear to be consistently related to any obvious directional cue; changes in direction were observed on occasions, however, and one such change was clearly associated with a change in the direction of the wind. The degree of collective orientation was a rather more variable quantity than the direction, and increases in degree were sometimes associated with increases in the number of locusts arriving at the observation site.This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- The nocturnal migration of the Australian plague locust, Chortoicetes terminifera (Walker) (Orthoptera: Acrididae): quantitative radar observations of a series of northward flightsBulletin of Entomological Research, 1983
- A Long-Range Migration of Grasshoppers Observed in the Sahelian Zone of Mali by Two RadarsJournal of Animal Ecology, 1983
- Insect migration across Bass Strait during spring: a radar studyBulletin of Entomological Research, 1981
- SPRUCE BUDWORM (LEPIDOPTERA: TORTRICIDAE) MOTH FLIGHT AND DISPERSAL: NEW UNDERSTANDING FROM CANOPY OBSERVATIONS, RADAR, AND AIRCRAFTMemoirs of the Entomological Society of Canada, 1980
- Radar-based studies of the migratory flight of grasshoppers in the middle Niger area of MaliProceedings of the Royal Society of London. B. Biological Sciences, 1979
- Collective orientation in night-flying insectsNature, 1975
- Flights after sunset by the Australian plagye locust, Chortoicetes terminifera (Walk.) and their significance in dispersal and migrationAustralian Journal of Zoology, 1971
- Night flights of the Australian plague locust, Chortoicetes terminifera Walk., in relation to stormsAustralian Journal of Zoology, 1969
- Statistical Methods for the Analysis of Problems in Animal Orientation and Certain Biological Rhythms.Biometrika, 1966