Journal article

The complex tibial organ of the New Zealand ground weta: sensory adaptations for vibrational signal detection


Authors listStrauß, J; Lomas, K; Field, LH

Publication year2017

JournalScientific Reports

Volume number7

ISSN2045-2322

Open access statusGold

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-02132-1

PublisherNature Research


Abstract

In orthopteran insects, a complex tibial organ has evolved to detect substrate vibrations and/or airborne sound. Species of New Zealand weta (Anostostomatidae) with tympanal ears on the foreleg tibia use this organ to communicate by sound, while in atympanate species (which communicate by substrate drumming) the organ is unstudied. We investigated the complex tibial organ of the atympanate ground weta, Hemiandrus pallitarsis, for vibration detection adaptations. This system contains four sensory components (subgenual organ, intermediate organ, crista acustica homolog, accessory organ) in all legs, together with up to 90 scolopidial sensilla. Microcomputed tomography shows that the subgenual organ spans the hemolymph channel, with attachments suggesting that hemolymph oscillations displace the organ in a hinged-plate fashion. Subgenual sensilla are likely excited by substrate oscillations transmitted within the leg. Instead of the usual suspension within the middle of the tibial cavity, we show that the intermediate organ and crista acustica homolog comprise a cellular mass broadly attached to the anterior tibial wall. They likely detect cuticular vibrations, and not airborne sound. This atympanate complex tibial organ shows elaborate structural changes suggesting detection of vibrational stimuli by parallel input pathways, thus correlating well with the burrowing lifestyle and communication by substrate-transmitted vibration.




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleStrauß, J., Lomas, K. and Field, L. (2017) The complex tibial organ of the New Zealand ground weta: sensory adaptations for vibrational signal detection, Scientific Reports, 7, Article 2031. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-02132-1

APA Citation styleStrauß, J., Lomas, K., & Field, L. (2017). The complex tibial organ of the New Zealand ground weta: sensory adaptations for vibrational signal detection. Scientific Reports. 7, Article 2031. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-02132-1



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