|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
JOHN G. HILDEBRAND Research on insect olfaction is important for at
least two reasons. First, the olfactory systems of insects and
their arthropod kin are experi mentally favourable models for
studies aimed at learning about general principles of olfaction
that apply to vertebrates and invertebrates alike. Detailed
comparisons between the olfactory pathways in vertebrates and
insects have revealed striking similarities of functional
organisation, physiol ogy, and development, suggesting that
olfactory information is processed through neural mechanisms more
similar than different in these evolution arily remote creatures.
Second, insect olfaction itself is important because of the
economic and medical impact of insects that are agricultural pests
and disease vectors, as well as positive impact of beneficial
species, such as the bees and moths responsible for pollination and
production of honey. The harm or benefit attributable to an insect
is a function of what it does - that is, of its behaviour - which
is shaped by sensory information. Often olfaction is the key
modality for control of basic insect behaviour, such as ori
entation and movement toward, and interactions with, potential
mates, appro priate sites for oviposition, and sources of food. Not
surprisingly, therefore, much work on insect olfaction has been
motivated by long-term hopes of using knowledge of this pivotal
sensory system to design strategies for mon itoring and managing
harmful species and fostering the welfare of beneficial ones."
JOHN G. HILDEBRAND Research on insect olfaction is important for at
least two reasons. First, the olfactory systems of insects and
their arthropod kin are experi mentally favourable models for
studies aimed at learning about general principles of olfaction
that apply to vertebrates and invertebrates alike. Detailed
comparisons between the olfactory pathways in vertebrates and
insects have revealed striking similarities of functional
organisation, physiol ogy, and development, suggesting that
olfactory information is processed through neural mechanisms more
similar than different in these evolution arily remote creatures.
Second, insect olfaction itself is important because of the
economic and medical impact of insects that are agricultural pests
and disease vectors, as well as positive impact of beneficial
species, such as the bees and moths responsible for pollination and
production of honey. The harm or benefit attributable to an insect
is a function of what it does - that is, of its behaviour - which
is shaped by sensory information. Often olfaction is the key
modality for control of basic insect behaviour, such as ori
entation and movement toward, and interactions with, potential
mates, appro priate sites for oviposition, and sources of food. Not
surprisingly, therefore, much work on insect olfaction has been
motivated by long-term hopes of using knowledge of this pivotal
sensory system to design strategies for mon itoring and managing
harmful species and fostering the welfare of beneficial ones."
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
|