Arid
DOI10.3389/fnbeh.2016.00047
Amblypygids: Model Organisms for the Study of Arthropod Navigation Mechanisms in Complex Environments?
Wiegmann, Daniel D.1,2; Hebets, Eileen A.3; Gronenberg, Wulfila4; Graving, Jacob M.1; Bingman, Verner P.2,5
通讯作者Wiegmann, Daniel D.
来源期刊FRONTIERS IN BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE
ISSN1662-5153
出版年2016
卷号10
英文摘要

Navigation is an ideal behavioral model for the study of sensory system integration and the neural substrates associated with complex behavior. For this broader purpose, however, it may be profitable to develop new model systems that are both tractable and sufficiently complex to ensure that information derived from a single sensory modality and path integration are inadequate to locate a goal. Here, we discuss some recent discoveries related to navigation by amblypygids, nocturnal arachnids that inhabit the tropics and sub-tropics. Nocturnal displacement experiments under the cover of a tropical rainforest reveal that these animals possess navigational abilities that are reminiscent, albeit on a smaller spatial scale, of true-navigating vertebrates. Specialized legs, called antenniform legs, which possess hundreds of olfactory and tactile sensory hairs, and vision appear to be involved. These animals also have enormous mushroom bodies, higher-order brain regions that, in insects, integrate contextual cues and may be involved in spatial memory. In amblypygids, the complexity of a nocturnal rainforest may impose navigational challenges that favor the integration of information derived from multimodal cues. Moreover, the movement of these animals is easily studied in the laboratory and putative neural integration sites of sensory information can be manipulated. Thus, amblypygids could serve as model organisms for the discovery of neural substrates associated with a unique and potentially sophisticated navigational capability. The diversity of habitats in which amblypygids are found also offers an opportunity for comparative studies of sensory integration and ecological selection pressures on navigation mechanisms.


英文关键词amblypygid mushroom bodies multimodal sensory integration navigation mechanisms Phrynus
类型Article
语种英语
国家USA
收录类别SCI-E
WOS记录号WOS:000371545900001
WOS关键词SPIDER CUPIENNIUS-SALEI ; PSEUDOPARVULUS CLASS ARACHNIDA ; LYCOSA-TARANTULA ARANEAE ; LAND HERMIT-CRAB ; WHIP SPIDER ; PATH-INTEGRATION ; MUSHROOM BODIES ; DESERT ANTS ; EVOLUTIONARY IMPLICATIONS ; EXPLORATORY-BEHAVIOR
WOS类目Behavioral Sciences ; Neurosciences
WOS研究方向Behavioral Sciences ; Neurosciences & Neurology
来源机构University of Arizona
资源类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://119.78.100.177/qdio/handle/2XILL650/193032
作者单位1.Bowling Green State Univ, Dept Biol Sci, Bowling Green, OH 43403 USA;
2.Bowling Green State Univ, JP Scott Ctr Neurosci Mind & Behav, Bowling Green, OH 43403 USA;
3.Univ Nebraska, Sch Biol Sci, Lincoln, NE USA;
4.Univ Arizona, Dept Neurosci, Tucson, AZ USA;
5.Bowling Green State Univ, Dept Psychol, Bowling Green, OH 43403 USA
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Wiegmann, Daniel D.,Hebets, Eileen A.,Gronenberg, Wulfila,et al. Amblypygids: Model Organisms for the Study of Arthropod Navigation Mechanisms in Complex Environments?[J]. University of Arizona,2016,10.
APA Wiegmann, Daniel D.,Hebets, Eileen A.,Gronenberg, Wulfila,Graving, Jacob M.,&Bingman, Verner P..(2016).Amblypygids: Model Organisms for the Study of Arthropod Navigation Mechanisms in Complex Environments?.FRONTIERS IN BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE,10.
MLA Wiegmann, Daniel D.,et al."Amblypygids: Model Organisms for the Study of Arthropod Navigation Mechanisms in Complex Environments?".FRONTIERS IN BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE 10(2016).
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