Mosquito hearing: sound-induced antennal vibrations in male and female Aedes aegypti
Open Access
- 15 October 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by The Company of Biologists in Journal of Experimental Biology
- Vol. 202 (20) , 2727-2738
- https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.202.20.2727
Abstract
Male mosquitoes are attracted by the flight sounds of conspecific females. In males only, the antennal flagellum bears a large number of long hairs and is therefore said to be plumose. As early as 1855, it was proposed that this remarkable antennal anatomy served as a sound-receiving structure. In the present study, the sound-induced vibrations of the antennal flagellum in male and female Aedes aegypti were compared, and the functional significance of the flagellar hairs for audition was examined. In both males and females, the antennae are resonantly tuned mechanical systems that move as simple forced damped harmonic oscillators when acoustically stimulated. The best frequency of the female antenna is around 230 Hz; that of the male is around 380 Hz, which corresponds approximately to the fundamental frequency of female flight sounds. The antennal hairs of males are resonantly tuned to frequencies between approximately 2600 and 3100 Hz and are therefore stiffly coupled to, and move together with, the flagellar shaft when stimulated at biologically relevant frequencies around 380 Hz. Because of this stiff coupling, forces acting on the hairs can be transmitted to the shaft and thus to the auditory sensory organ at the base of the flagellum, a process that is proposed to improve acoustic sensitivity. Indeed, the mechanical sensitivity of the male antenna not only exceeds the sensitivity of the female antenna but also those of all other arthropod movement receivers studied so far.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- WHICH QS TO CHOOSE: QUESTIONS OF QUALITY IN BIOACOUSTICS?Bioacoustics, 1999
- Tympanal Hearing in InsectsAnnual Review of Entomology, 1996
- Dynamics of arthropod filiform hairs. II. Mechanical properties of spider trichobothria ( Cupiennius salei Keys.)Philosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 1993
- Dynamics of arthropod filiform hairs. I. Mathematical modelling of the hair and air motionsPhilosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 1993
- Acoustical response of hair receptors in insectsJournal of Comparative Physiology A, 1978
- Acoustics of Insect SongNature, 1971
- Stimuli provided by Courtship of Male Drosophila melanogasterNature, 1967
- Orientation of the Males of Aedes aegypti (L.) (Diptera: Culicidae) to SoundThe Canadian Entomologist, 1962
- Flight Responses to Various Sounds by Adult Males of Aedes aegypti (L.) (Diptera: Culicidae)The Canadian Entomologist, 1959
- Experiments on the Supposed Auditory Apparatus of the MosquitoThe American Naturalist, 1874