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Chemical Senses, Vol 23, 351-357, Copyright © 1998 by Oxford University Press


ARTICLES

Olfactory sensitivity in tsetse flies: a daily rhythm

WM Van der Goes van Naters, CJ Den Otter and FW Maes
Department of Animal Physiology, University of Groningen, The Netherlands.

The diurnal tsetse Glossina morsitans morsitans bites especially in early morning and late afternoon; around midday feeding is at a low. In laboratory apparatus that measures the amount of locomotion under constant conditions over the photophase, the flies display a similar patterning of activity levels. The profile of daily rhythms for G. morsitans reported in the literature includes a number of motor and sensory motor systems that fluctuate cophasically. Lacking is a study on the patterning of the senses' response levels. In this paper we present the first instance of a daily modulation in the sense of smell. We stimulated the antennae with concentration series of host-derived odours and measured the spiking rate of cells at different times during the photophase. The concentration-response curves suggest that the sensitivity of antennal olfactory cells flows in parallel with the other daily rhythms. This was also reflected in electroantennograms (EAGs). The electroantennography was extended to G. fuscipes fuscipes, whose level of spontaneous locomotor activity--instead of following a U- shaped pattern--rises gradually over the photophase. Again, the EAGs appeared to parallel the species' locomotor activity. What we believe happens is that the organism tones down the sensitivity of its odour receptors during periods of anticipated inactivity for reasons of economy.
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