Free-flight responses ofDrosophila melanogasterto attractive odors
- 1 August 2006
- journal article
- Published by The Company of Biologists in Journal of Experimental Biology
- Vol. 209 (15) , 3001-3017
- https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.02305
Abstract
Many motile organisms localize the source of attractive odorants by following plumes upwind. In the case of D. melanogaster, little is known of how individuals alter their flight trajectories after encountering and losing a plume of an attractive odorant. We have characterized the three-dimensional flight behavior of D. melanogaster in a wind tunnel under a variety of odor conditions. In the absence of olfactory cues, hungry flies initiate flight and display anemotactic orientation. Following contact with a narrow ribbon plume of an attractive odor, flies reduce their crosswind velocity while flying faster upwind, resulting in a surge directed toward the odor source. Following loss of odor contact due to plume truncation, flies frequently initiate a stereotyped crosswind casting response, a behavior rarely observed in a continuous odor plume. Similarly, within a homogeneous odor cloud, flies move fast while maintaining an upwind heading. These results indicate both similarities and differences between the behavior of D. melanogaster and the responses of male moths to pheromone plumes, suggesting possible differences in underlying neural mechanisms.Keywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- Dissection of the pheromone-modulated flight of moths using single-pulse response as a templateCellular and Molecular Life Sciences, 1996
- Fine-scale structure of pheromone plumes modulates upwind orientation of flying mothsNature, 1994
- MaleHeliothis virescens maintain upwind flight in response to experimentally pulsed filaments of their sex pheromone (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae)Journal of Insect Behavior, 1992
- Range perception through apparent image speed in freely flying honeybeesVisual Neuroscience, 1991
- Manoeuvres used by flying male oriental fruit moths to relocate a sex pheromone plume in an experimentally shifted wind‐fieldPhysiological Entomology, 1987
- A pulsed cloud of sex pheromone elicits upwind flight in male mothsPhysiological Entomology, 1985
- Effects of intermittent and continuous pheromone stimulation on the flight behaviour of the oriental fruit moth, Grapholita molestaPhysiological Entomology, 1984
- Genetic variation for anemotaxis (wind-directed movement) in laboratory and wild-caught populations ofDrosophiliaBehavior Genetics, 1982
- Guidance of flying male moths by wind‐borne sex pheromonePhysiological Entomology, 1981
- An analysis of anemotactic zigzagging flight in male moths stimulated by pheromonePhysiological Entomology, 1978