食蚜蝇对人工目标的追击

Malin Thyselius, Yuri Ogawa, Richard Leibbrandt, T. Wardill, P. Gonzalez-Bellido, Karin Nordström
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引用次数: 3

摘要

视觉化移动的小物体的能力对许多动物的生存至关重要,因为这些物体可能代表着捕食者或猎物。例如,包括蜻蜓、强盗蝇和杀人蝇在内的掠食性昆虫,对生物和人工目标都能进行优雅、高速的追逐。许多非掠食性昆虫,包括雄性食蚜蝇和苍蝇,也在领土或求偶互动中追求目标。迄今为止,大多数食蚜蝇的活动都是在户外进行的。为了在更可控的环境下研究食蚜蝇(Eristalis tenax)的自然追求,我们建造了一个足够大的室内竞技场,以鼓励自然行为。我们展示了不同大小的人造珠子,以不同的速度移动,并用两台摄像机拍摄了追逐过程,允许随后的3D重建食蚜蝇和头部位置作为时间的函数。我们发现雄性食蚜蝇不太可能使用基于角度大小或速度的严格启发式规则来决定何时开始追捕,至少在我们的室内环境中是这样。我们发现,食蚜蝇追逐速度更快的珠子时,其轨迹涉及向下飞向珠子。此外,我们表明目标追求行为可以分为两个阶段。在第一阶段,食蚜蝇试图通过高速拦截来迅速减少与目标的距离。在第二阶段,食蚜蝇的前进速度与头部的速度相关,因此食蚜蝇保持接近,但不会抓住它。这可能类似于蜻蜓的影子行为,之前被称为“运动伪装”。
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Hoverfly (Eristalis tenax) pursuit of artificial targets
The ability to visualize small moving objects is vital for the survival of many animals, as these could represent predators or prey. For example, predatory insects, including dragonflies, robber flies and killer flies, perform elegant, high-speed pursuits of both biological and artificial targets. Many non-predatory insects, including male hoverflies and blowflies, also pursue targets during territorial or courtship interactions. To date, most hoverfly pursuits were studied outdoors. To investigate naturalistic hoverfly (Eristalis tenax) pursuits under more controlled settings, we constructed an indoor arena that was large enough to encourage naturalistic behavior. We presented artificial beads of different sizes, moving at different speeds, and filmed pursuits with two cameras, allowing subsequent 3D reconstruction of the hoverfly and bead position as a function of time. We show that male E. tenax hoverflies are unlikely to use strict heuristic rules based on angular size or speed to determine when to start pursuit, at least in our indoor setting. We found that hoverflies pursued faster beads when the trajectory involved flying downwards towards the bead. Furthermore, we show that target pursuit behavior can be broken down into two stages. In the first stage the hoverfly attempts to rapidly decreases the distance to the target by intercepting it at high speed. During the second stage the hoverfly’s forward speed is correlated with the speed of the bead, so that the hoverfly remains close, but without catching it. This may be similar to dragonfly shadowing behavior, previously coined ‘motion camouflage’.
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