Modeling optimal strategies for finding a resource-linked, windborne odor plume: Theories, robotics, and biomimetic lessons from flying insects
Visualitza/Obre
Altres autors/es
Data de publicació
2015ISSN
1557-7023
Resum
Male moths locate females by navigating along her pheromone plume, often flying hundreds of meters en
route. As the first male to find a calling female is most apt to be her mate, this can be termed ‘‘a race to find the female’’
and it is assumed to be under strong selective pressure for efficiency and rapidity. Locating a distant, odor-linked
resource involves two strategies. The first is to contact the outer envelope of the odor plume. When wind direction is
relatively invariant, the plume stretches and then crosswind flights may be favored, although when wind direction shifts
over 608, upwind and downwind paths may be optimal. Alternatively, the path may be random with respect to the
direction of wind flow, with periodic changes in direction, as in either Le´vy or Random Walks. After first detecting the
pheromone, a second strategy follows: moths navigate along the plume by heading upwind when the pheromone is
detected, with crosswind casting to re-establish contact if the plume is lost. This orientation path is not straightforward in
nature, however, because atmospheric turbulence fragments the plume, thereby creating large odor gaps. Furthermore, a
shifting wind direction can lead the responder out of the plume. One way to explore which strategies are optimal for
enabling initial contact with the plume and subsequent navigation is through modeling of plumes’ dispersal and of
insects’ flight strategies. Our simulations using the flight characteristics of the male gypsy moth (Lymantria dispar)
suggest that search strategies similar to Le´vy Walks are most apt to result in a high probability of contact with
plumes. Although a searching trajectory aimed predominately crosswind performed almost as well as those with a
random orientation when wind direction was relatively stable, downwind biased trajectories were least successful. A
random orientation with respect to immediate wind flow, as used in our simulations of Le´vy and Random Walks,
seems optimal both for initial discovery of the plume and likelihood of locating an odor source. In the two available
direct field observations, moths adopted a random orientation with respect to concurrent wind direction.
Tipus de document
Article
Llengua
Anglès
Paraules clau
Plagues d'insectes -- Control
Simulació per ordinador
Olors -- Control
Pàgines
17 p.
Publicat per
Oxford University Press
Citació
Bau Macià, J., & Carde, R. T. (2015). Modeling optimal strategies for finding a resource-linked, windborne odor plume: Theories, robotics, and biomimetic lessons from flying insects. Integrative and Comparative Biology, 55(3), 461-477.
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