Abstract

ABSTRACT. On passing from clean air into a homogeneous cloud of sex pheromone in a wind tunnel flying male Adoxophyes orana (F.v.R.) (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae) turned more or less upwind and reduced the time and distance between their switchings of track from one side of the wind line to the other. These responses became adapted under the constant pheromone stimulation in the cloud, thereby arresting upwind progress; but the adapted moths would now ‘lock‐on’ to an added pheromone plume and advance upwind along it. Moths also locked‐on to the border of a pheromone cloud, not by turning back on losing the scent as previously supposed but by initiating the above programme of small‐amplitude, crosswind movements (reversing anemomenotaxis). The onset and cessation of the pheromone stimulus produced anemotactic responses that differed quantitatively within a continuum, not two distinct kinds of response as previously supposed. The behavioural mechanism whereby uniform permeation of an area with synthetic sex pheromone can prevent males from finding females is reconsidered.

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