Abstract

The goal of the work was to establish whether the seven-spot ladybird Coccinella septempunctata has a spatial constancy towards the shape of images. The beetles were presented with black figures on the white wall of the cylindrical arena. The beetles were walking with different orientation of the body relative to the force of gravity: in the horizontal plane, on a three-ray labyrinth or on the flat ring in the bottom of the arena; with an inclination of 90° on the cylindrical ring wall; upwards on the vertical labyrinth or upside down, under a thin wire labyrinth stretched over the arena. The beetles in the horizontal position did not discriminate from each other differently orientated images, except for two types of the figures: vertical or horizontal bands (the choice was 80:20%) and meanders orientated downwards and upwards (the choice was 56:44%). The bands oriented vertically towards the Earth were preferred by the beetles when observed from the inclination position, but not in the case of a vertical ascension. The meanders were not discriminated when observed from the upside down position. The ascending oblique bands were preferred over the descending ones. No ability to discriminate the shape of objects was found in the ladybirds, and, correspondingly, they have no spatial constancy. The discrimination of figures and ornaments has the simplest mechanism: detection of the movement (directional) of a contrast margin.

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