Abstract

Many types of sense organs have been demonstrated to show repetitive discharges during walking that could provide informational cues about leg movements and other parameters of locomotion. We have recorded activities of receptors of the distal (tarsal) segments of the cockroach hindleg in restrained and freely moving animals while they were videotaped. These recordings show peaks of activities at the onset and termination of the stance phase. We have morphologically and physiologically identified a joint angle receptor, the tarso-pretarsal chordotonal organ, that contributes to the discharges seen late in stance, prior to the onset of leg flexion in swing. This sense organ encodes the angle and rate of change of the most distal leg joint and specifically discharges when the claws are disengaged from the substrate. Applied displacements of the claws in restrained preparations elicit reflex activation of the tibial flexor muscle and a crossed extensor reflex in the opposite hindleg. These reflexes could function to insure that leg flexion in swing does not occur until the claws are disengaged and to enhance support by the opposite hindleg. Thus, the regular discharges of the chordotonal organ could assure efficient and coordinated muscle contractions and movements during normal, unperturbed walking.

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