4.6 Review Book Chapter

Navigation Along Windborne Plumes of Pheromone and Resource-Linked Odors

Journal

ANNUAL REVIEW OF ENTOMOLOGY, VOL 66, 2021
Volume 66, Issue -, Pages 317-336

Publisher

ANNUAL REVIEWS
DOI: 10.1146/annurev-ento-011019-024932

Keywords

attraction; bioinspired models; taxis; kinesis; optomotor anemotaxis; orientation

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Insects locate resources by flying upwind along odor plumes, which can persist even when diluted. They navigate by optomotor reaction but differences in odor concentration do not reliably indicate distance or direction to the odor source. The fine-scale structure and intermittency of odor plumes can influence the insect's upwind course.
Many insects locate resources such as a mate, a host, or food by flying upwind along the odor plumes that these resources emit to their source. A windborne plume has a turbulent structure comprised of odor filaments interspersed with clean air. As it propagates downwind, the plume becomes more dispersed and dilute, but filaments with concentrations above the threshold required to elicit a behavioral response from receiving organisms can persist for long distances. Flying insects orient along plumes by steering upwind, triggered by the optomotor reaction. Sequential measurements of differences in odor concentration are unreliable indicators of distance to or direction of the odor source. Plume intermittency and the plume's fine-scale structure can play a role in setting an insect's upwind course. The prowess of insects in navigating to odor sources has spawned bioinspired virtual models and even odor-seeking robots, although some of these approaches use mechanisms that are unnecessarily complex and probably exceed an insect's processing capabilities.

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