Abstract
Female blowflies (Phormla regina Meigen) which had been fed either sucrose (S flies) or sucrose and yeast (SY flies) were tested for their response to novel odours in an actograph. All responded with an increase in activity. S flies were consistently more responsive than SY flies both in their increase in activity and in the number of different odours to which they responded significantly. S flies found food rapidly over a short distance when they were made active either by a stimulating odour or by mechanical agitation. Olfaction, rather than vision, was demonstrated to be the sense mediating the increase in activity.In insects the consummatory aspects of feeding have been studied extensively, but the appetitive aspects are poorly understood. The sense of smell and the behaviours stimulated by odours play a fundamental role in the appetitive component of food finding. Pospisil (1958), for example, showed that Lucilia ceasar, a fly found on freshly killed meat, was attracted to low concentrations of skatol in a two‐choice olfactometer, but repelled by high concentrations. On the other hand, Calliphora vomitoria and C. mortuorium, two flies found on very decayed meat, were attracted to the concentration of skatol which repelled L. ceasar. Ishikawa et al. (1969) Found that silkworm larvae could find mulberry leaves 10 cm away within 3 min, whereas antennectomized caterpillars were unable to find the leaves.The consummatory aspects of feeding are well known in Phormia regina (Dethier, 1976), so the present experiments were designed to explore the contribution of olfactory stimulation to the appetitive component. Two types of experiment were undertaken. In one the effect of food odours on activity levels was studied, and in the other the efficiency of this response in finding food over a short distance was examined. Previous studies (Rachman, 1980) showed that feeding behaviour was affected by the nutritional history of the flies, so female flies fed one of two diets were tested.RÉSUMÉ: ACTIVITÉ DE PHORMIA REGINA EN RÉPONSE DES ODEURS ETRANGESDes effluves de banane, pomme, fore de bœuf et levure ont été testées en actographe contenant 20 femelles de Phormia regina de 2 à 9 jours. Ces mouches avaient été nourries antérieurement, soit sur sucrose seul à 0,1 M (mouches S), soit sur sucrose (0,1 M) el 10% de levure (mouches SY). L'activité des mouches croit quand les odeurs sont introduites, mais il en est de même quand le courant d'air pur est changé.L'augmentation de l'activité provoquée par la banane, la pomme, et la levure est significativement supérieure pour les mouches S, à celle provoquée par le changement du courant d'air (Fig, 1), Chez les mouches SY l'augmentation significative est observée avec la banane et la levure (Fig. 2). Les mouches S sont plus actives et répondent mieux que les mouches SY. Une goutte de levure dans un récipient avec des mouches S de 6 jours stimule leur activité et la goutte est trouvée rapidement (16 sec). Des gouttes d'eau ou de sucrose ne stimulent pas l'activité, et les mouches mettent beaucoup plus longtemps pour les trouver (> 100 sec.), En secouant les récipients pour rendre les mouches actives on obtient une découverte des gouttes d'eau ou de sucrose aussi rapide que la découverte des gouttes de levures par les mouches non perturbées. Des mouches antennotectomisées, non perturbées, mettent 252 sec, pour trouver une goutte de levure, mais des mouches antennotectomisées et agitées artificiellement trouvent les gouttes presqu'aussi rapidement que les mouches normales non perturbées (Fig. 3).