Abstract

IntroductionWhirligig beetles (Coleoptera: Gyrinidae) are aquatic insects living on the water surface. They are equipped with four compound eyes, an upper pair viewing above the water surface and a lower submerged pair viewing beneath the water surface, but little is known about how their visual brain centers (optic lobes) are organized to serve such unusual eyes. We show here, for the first time, the peculiar optic lobe organization of the larval and adult whirligig beetle Dineutus sublineatus.ResultsThe divided compound eyes of adult whirligig beetles supply optic lobes that are split into two halves, an upper half and lower half, comprising an upper and lower lamina, an upper and lower medulla and a bilobed partially split lobula. However, the lobula plate, a neuropil that in flies is known to be involved in mediating stabilized flight, exists only in conjunction with the lower lobe of the lobula. We show that, as in another group of predatory beetle larvae, in the whirligig beetle the aquatic larva precociously develops a lobula plate equipped with wide-field neurons. It is supplied by three larval laminas serving the three dorsal larval stemmata, which are adjacent to the developing upper compound eye.ConclusionsIn adult whirligig beetles, dual optic neuropils serve the upper aerial eyes and the lower subaquatic eyes. The exception is the lobula plate. A lobula plate develops precociously in the larva where it is supplied by inputs from three larval stemmata that have a frontal-upper field of view, in which contrasting objects such as prey items trigger a body lunge and mandibular grasp. This precocious lobula plate is lost during pupal metamorphosis, whereas another lobula plate develops normally during metamorphosis and in the adult is associated with the lower eye. The different roles of the upper and lower lobula plates in supporting, respectively, larval predation and adult optokinetic balance are discussed. Precocious development of the upper lobula plate represents convergent evolution of an ambush hunting lifestyle, as exemplified by the terrestrial larvae of tiger beetles (Cicindelinae), in which activation of neurons in their precocious lobula plates, each serving two large larval stemmata, releases reflex body extension and mandibular grasp.

Highlights

  • Whirligig beetles (Coleoptera: Gyrinidae) are aquatic insects living on the water surface

  • Split optic lobes of the adult whirligig beetle D. sublineatus The compound eyes of whirligig beetles are divided into two parts, one half viewing the aerial scene, the other viewing beneath the waterline

  • The laminas and medullas are composed of as many columns as there are ommatidia, whereas in the lobula the periodicity of columnar neurons is coarsened, as it is in many other insect species. These basic arrangements in D. sublineatus are independent of its split optic lobes (Figure 1A)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Whirligig beetles (Coleoptera: Gyrinidae) are aquatic insects living on the water surface. Relays from two pairs of large single-lens eyes (stemmata), via an underlying larval lamina neuropil, supply a reniform neuropil (called the tectum [1]) equipped with wide-field tangential neurons that are tuned to movement of prey-sized objects across the opening of the larva’s burrow [5,6,7,8]. Responses by these neurons result in reflex-like extensions of the larva’s body and a mandibular grasp culminating in prey capture [9,10]. The larval tectum has been interpreted as resulting from the precocious development of the adult lobula plate, which is employed in the larva for visually mediated predation [1]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.