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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-1351
    Keywords: Key words Femoral chordotonal organ ; Thanatosis ; Catalepsy ; Cricket ; Gryllus bimaculatus
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The cricket Gryllus bimaculatus displayed freezing (thanatosis) after struggling while the femoro-tibial joints of the walking legs were forcibly restrained. Myographic recording indicated that strong contraction of the flexor tibia muscle “leg flexion response” occurred under this restrained condition. During thanatosis, when the femoro-tibial joint was passively displaced and held for several seconds, it maintained its new position (catalepsy). Only discharge of the slow flexor units was mechanically indispensable for maintaining thanatosis and catalepsy. Differing roles of identified neuron subgroups of the femoral chordotonal organ were elucidated using this behavioral substrate. Ablation of the dorsal group neurons in the ventral scoloparium strengthened the leg flexion response and the normal resistance reflex, while ablation of the ventral group weakened both motor outputs. Ablation of the dorsal scoloparium neurons, or other main sensory nerves caused no detectable deficiency in femoro-tibial joint control. These results imply that both modes of flexor muscle activation promoted by the ventral group neurons are normally held under inhibitory control by the dorsal group. It is hypothesized that this antagonistic function causes immobilization of the femoro-tibial joint in a wide range of angles in thanatosis and catalepsy.
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-1351
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary Investigation of the physiological and biophysical properties of the auditory system of the New Zealand weta,Hemideina crassidens has revealed the following: 1. The frequency/threshold curve for the massed response of primary auditory fibres in the tympanal nerve has a peak of sensitivity at 2.0–2.5 kHz. Absolute threshold is 20–35 dB SPL in individual preparations and the roll-off is about 15 dB/octave below the optimum and about 27 dB/octave above the optimum frequency (Fig. 1). 2. Occlusion of either the anterior or posterior tympanum causes a small loss of sensitivity (〈8dB) only for frequencies above the hearing optimum. Occlusion of both auditory tympana reduces the sensitivity of the ear by 20–25 dB from 0.63 kHz to 5.0 kHz and by 7–15 dB up to 10 kHz (Fig. 2). 3. Blocking the leg tracheae in the femur causes no change in the sensitivity of the ear to sounds of 0.63–10 kHz (Fig. 3). Shielding the tympanic membranes from external sound, with the tracheal system intact, reduces the sensitivity of the ear by about 40 dB at the optimum frequency and by more than 10 dB for other frequencies in the range 0.63–10 kHz (Fig. 4). 4. Reducing the volume of the tibial air space behind the tympana by approximately 60% increases auditory thresholds for frequencies at and below the hearing optimum, whereas thresholds for higher frequencies are unchanged (Fig. 5). 5. For sound frequencies from 0.63 kHz to 8.0 kHz, the intact auditory system inH. crassidens has no directional sensitivity (Fig. 6). 6. Stridulatory sounds produced byH. crassidens are broad-band, having a peak in the power spectrum near 2.0 kHz and a roll-off of about 15 dB/octave towards higher frequencies (Fig. 7). 7. The weta auditory system functions as a one-input pressure receiver; its characteristics are compared with the auditory systems of Gryllidae and Tettigoniidae.
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Journal of comparative physiology 184 (1999), S. 169-183 
    ISSN: 1432-1351
    Keywords: Key words Insects ; Behaviour ; Electrophysiology ; Mechanoreceptors ; Sensory neuropiles
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract A chordotonal organ in the prothoracic segment of a locust combines features of a proprioceptive mechanoreceptor and an acoustic organ. This organ is closely associated with the tracheal system in the neck. The central nervous projections of the sensory cells contact neuropiles in all thoracic ganglia with the most dense arborizations in the metathoracic ganglion in close proximity, and even with some overlap, to the projections of tympanic fibres. Physiological experiments show that this organ responds to mechanical displacement of its receptor apodeme and, in addition, to acoustic stimulation via either a region of the cervical membrane which may act as a functional tympanic membrane, or via the tracheal system.
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Insect hearing ; Sound receptors ; Stenopelmatid ; Auditory system ; Mechanoreceptor ; Scolopidia ; Weta ; Hemideina crassidens
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary The morphology and histology of the tibial auditory system of the New Zealand weta, Hemideina crassidens, are described. The groups of acoustic sensilla conform closely to the subgenual organ, intermediate organ and crista acoustica of the Tettigoniidae. Each prothoracic tibia bears two thick (40–100 μm) tympana of approximately equal size divided into two distinct zones. The tracheae of the prothoracic legs are connected across the midline by a transverse commissure and by a chiasma between the ventral longitudinal trunks. No expanded vesicle (“vesicula acoustica”) is associated with the spiracle. The anterior and posterior tracheae are divided into three distinct regions within the tibia: (1) a bulbous proximal posterior inflated chamber, (2) the tympanal vesicles to which the tympana attach, and (3) an elongate distal posterior inflated chamber. The pattern of innervation in the tympanal region is similar to that of gryllids as is the central projection of the tympanal nerve. The subgenual organ, which contains ca. 50 sensilla, forms an acute angle with the wall of the leg. The intermediate organ contains ca. 19 sensilla forming an arc against the anterior wall of the leg. The crista acoustica contains ca. 50 sensilla aligned in a gelatinous matrix along the dorsal surface of the anterior tympanal vesicle. Each dendrite projects distally, then is reflected proximally and dorsally to end in a scolopale embedded in an attachment cell. The attachment cells are stellate in the proximal portion of the crista, but distally they occur as parallel lamellae. The weta ear is compared with those of other Orthoptera.
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 1981-05-01
    Print ISSN: 0302-766X
    Electronic ISSN: 1432-0878
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Published by Springer
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