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Electrophysiological responses of the antennal campaniform sensilla to rapid changes of temperature in the ground beetles Pterostichus oblongopunctatus and Poecilus cupreus (Tribe Pterostichini) with different ecological preferences
Author(s) -
MUST ANNE,
MERIVEE ENNO,
MÄNd MARIKA,
LUIK ANNE,
HEIDEMAA MIKK
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
physiological entomology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.693
H-Index - 57
eISSN - 1365-3032
pISSN - 0307-6962
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-3032.2006.00518.x
Subject(s) - biology , tonic (physiology) , zoology , ecology , neuroscience
Cold cells innervating antennal campaniform sensilla of the ground beetles Pterostichus oblongopunctatus (Fabricius, 1787) and Poecilus cupreus (Linnaeus, 1758) belonging to the tribe Pterostichini fire at a stationary rate of 22–23 imp s −1 at 23 °C. In P. oblongopunctatus , there is a strong negative correlation between the stationary firing rate of the cold cell and temperature. By contrast, no relationship between the firing rate and temperature is observed in P. cupreus. Mean peak frequencies, reaching up to nearly 500 Hz, and first‐second firing rates, reaching up to 140 imp s −1 , are observed at the beginning of the phasic‐tonic response to rapid cooling of the cold cells of P. cupreus, which are significantly higher than those for P. oblongopunctatus . However, firing rates of the cold cells of the two ground beetles studied do not differ 3 s later, during the tonic stabilization period of the response. The length of the long interspike period, lasting up to several seconds, at the beginning of rapid warming, is a positive function of the extent of change in temperature, and is longer in P. oblongopunctatus than in P. cupreus . These differences in the responses of the cold cells are related to the ecological preferences of the two ground beetles.

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