Journal article
Insect Antennal Morphology: The Evolution of Diverse Solutions to Odorant Perception
Mark A Elgar, Dong Zhang, Qike Wang, Bernadette Wittwer, Thi Pham Hieu, Tamara L Johnson, Christopher B Freelance, Marianne Coquilleau
Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine | Yale University | Published : 2018
Abstract
Chemical communication involves the production, transmission, and perception of odors. Most adult insects rely on chemical signals and cues to locate food resources, oviposition sites or reproductive partners and, consequently, numerous odors provide a vital source of information. Insects detect these odors with receptors mostly located on the antennae, and the diverse shapes and sizes of these antennae (and sensilla) are both astonishing and puzzling: what selective pressures are responsible for these different solutions to the same problem — to perceive signals and cues? This review describes the selection pressures derived from chemical communication that are responsible for shaping the d..
View full abstractGrants
Awarded by Australian Research Council
Awarded by Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities
Awarded by National Science Foundation of China
Funding Acknowledgements
We thank the Australian Research Council (grants DP0879610, DP0987360, DP120100162 to MAE), the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (JC2015-04 to DZ), and the National Science Foundation of China (31572305 to DZ) for supporting our studies of insect antennae.