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J Insect Physiol ; 55(9): 855-61, 2009 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19523956

ABSTRACT

Substrate vibratory information receptors are extensively studied in insects and spiders, however for water surface dwelling species little data is available. We studied the vibration receptive organs in tarsi of the water strider Aquarius paludum, using light, transmission and scanning electron microscopes, and recorded the neural activity of the organs in response to vibrational stimuli, which were afterwards analysed with a custom made spike sorting program. We found that the tarsal chordotonal organ has one set of three scoloparia: one in the tarsomere I and two in the tarsomere II, all of which consisted of a few scolopidia. The chordotonal organ clearly responded to vibratory stimulation. Furthermore, we found that a pair of large subapical emergent dorsal setae, which had been deemed mechanosensory by previous authors, are not so. In turn, four ventral subapical trichobothria that are in direct contact with the water surface during locomotion, proved to be mechanosensory. The anatomical and ultrastructural observations support these electro-physiological results.


Subject(s)
Heteroptera/physiology , Heteroptera/ultrastructure , Sensory Receptor Cells/physiology , Animals , Male , Neurophysiology , Tarsus, Animal/innervation , Tarsus, Animal/physiology , Tarsus, Animal/ultrastructure , Vibration
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