Spectral inputs and ocellar contributions to a pitch-sensitive descending neuron in the honeybee

Author:

Hung Y.-S.123,van Kleef J. P.34,Stange G.3,Ibbotson M. R.123

Affiliation:

1. National Vision Research Institute, Australian College of Optometry, Carlton, Victoria, Australia;

2. Department of Optometry and Vision Science, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, Australia;

3. Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence in Vision Science, Research School of Biology and Eccles Institute of Neuroscience, John Curtain School of Medical Research, Australian National University, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia; and

4. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, College of Engineering, University of California Berkeley, Berkeley, California

Abstract

By measuring insect compensatory optomotor reflexes to visual motion, researchers have examined the computational mechanisms of the motion processing system. However, establishing the spectral sensitivity of the neural pathways that underlie this motion behavior has been difficult, and the contribution of the simple eyes (ocelli) has been rarely examined. In this study we investigate the spectral response properties and ocellar inputs of an anatomically identified descending neuron (DNII2) in the honeybee optomotor pathway. Using a panoramic stimulus, we show that it responds selectively to optic flow associated with pitch rotations. The neuron is also stimulated with a custom-built light-emitting diode array that presented moving bars that were either all-green (spectrum 500–600 nm, peak 530 nm) or all-short wavelength (spectrum 350–430 nm, peak 380 nm). Although the optomotor response is thought to be dominated by green-sensitive inputs, we show that DNII2is equally responsive to, and direction selective to, both green- and short-wavelength stimuli. The color of the background image also influences the spontaneous spiking behavior of the cell: a green background produces significantly higher spontaneous spiking rates. Stimulating the ocelli produces strong modulatory effects on DNII2, significantly increasing the amplitude of its responses in the preferred motion direction and decreasing the response latency by adding a directional, short-latency response component. Our results suggest that the spectral sensitivity of the optomotor response in honeybees may be more complicated than previously thought and that ocelli play a significant role in shaping the timing of motion signals.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology,General Neuroscience

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