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  4. Three-dimensional flight tracking shows how a visual target alters tsetse fly responses to human breath in a wind tunnel

Three-dimensional flight tracking shows how a visual target alters tsetse fly responses to human breath in a wind tunnel

Author(s)
Gurba, Alexandre  
Laboratoire d'écologie et évolution des parasites  
Harraca, Vincent
Perret, Jean-Luc
Casera, Steve
Donnet, Stéphane
Guerin, Patrick  
Institut de biologie  
Date issued
2012
In
Physiological Entomology, Wiley
Vol
37
No
3
From page
250
To page
257
Subjects
Behaviour <i>Glossina brevipalpis</i> insect flight olfaction tsetse vision
Abstract
Tsetse flies <i>Glossina</i> spp. (Diptera; Glossinidae) are blood-feeding vectors of disease that are attracted to vertebrate hosts by odours and visual cues. Studies on how tsetse flies approach visual devices are of fundamental interest because they can help in the development of more efficient control tools. The responses of a forest tsetse fly species <i>Glossina brevipalpis</i> (Newstead) to human breath are tested in a wind tunnel in the presence or absence of a blue sphere as a visual target. The flight responses are video recorded with two motion-sensitive cameras and characterized in three dimensions. Although flies make meandering upwind flights predominantly in the horizontal plane in the plume of breath alone, upwind flights are highly directed at the visual target presented in the plume of breath. Flies responding to the visual target fly from take-off within stricter flight limits at lower ground speeds and with a significantly lower variance in flight trajectories in the horizontal plane. Once at the target, flies fly in loops principally in the horizontal plane within 40 cm of the blue sphere before descending in spirals beneath it. Successful field traps designed for <i>G. brevipalpis</i> take into account the strong horizontal component in local search behaviour by this species at objects. The results suggest that trapping devices should also take into account the propensity of <i>G. brevipalpis</i> to descend to the lower parts of visual targets.
Publication type
journal article
Identifiers
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/20.500.14713/65665
DOI
10.1111/j.1365-3032.2012.00840.x
-
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/123456789/6837
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