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Neuroscience and Neurobiology

Animal Migration

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Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences

Animal Cryptochromes Mediate Magnetoreception By An Unconventional Photochemical Mechanism, Robert Gegear, Lauren Foley, Amy Casselman, Steven Reppert Dec 2015

Animal Cryptochromes Mediate Magnetoreception By An Unconventional Photochemical Mechanism, Robert Gegear, Lauren Foley, Amy Casselman, Steven Reppert

Robert J. Gegear

Understanding the biophysical basis of animal magnetoreception has been one of the greatest challenges in sensory biology. Recently it was discovered that the light-dependent magnetic sense of Drosophila melanogaster is mediated by the ultraviolet (UV)-A/blue light photoreceptor cryptochrome (Cry). Here we show, using a transgenic approach, that the photoreceptive, Drosophila-like type 1 Cry and the transcriptionally repressive, vertebrate-like type 2 Cry of the monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus) can both function in the magnetoreception system of Drosophila and require UV-A/blue light (wavelength below 420 nm) to do so. The lack of magnetic responses for both Cry types at wavelengths above 420 …


Discordant Timing Between Antennae Disrupts Sun Compass Orientation In Migratory Monarch Butterflies, Patrick Guerra, Christine Merlin, Robert Gegear, Steven Reppert Dec 2015

Discordant Timing Between Antennae Disrupts Sun Compass Orientation In Migratory Monarch Butterflies, Patrick Guerra, Christine Merlin, Robert Gegear, Steven Reppert

Robert J. Gegear

To navigate during their long-distance migration, monarch butterflies (Danaus plexippus) use a time-compensated sun compass. The sun compass timing elements reside in light-entrained circadian clocks in the antennae. Here we show that either antenna is sufficient for proper time compensation. However, migrants with either antenna painted black (to block light entrainment) and the other painted clear (to permit light entrainment) display disoriented group flight. Remarkably, when the black-painted antenna is removed, re-flown migrants with a single, clear-painted antenna exhibit proper orientation behaviour. Molecular correlates of clock function reveal that period and timeless expression is highly rhythmic in brains and clear-painted …


Antennal Circadian Clocks Coordinate Sun Compass Orientation In Migratory Monarch Butterflies, Christine Merlin, Robert Gegear, Steven Reppert Dec 2015

Antennal Circadian Clocks Coordinate Sun Compass Orientation In Migratory Monarch Butterflies, Christine Merlin, Robert Gegear, Steven Reppert

Robert J. Gegear

During their fall migration, Eastern North American monarch butterflies (Danaus plexippus) use a time-compensated Sun compass to aid navigation to their overwintering grounds in central Mexico. It has been assumed that the circadian clock that provides time compensation resides in the brain, although this assumption has never been examined directly. Here, we show that the antennae are necessary for proper time-compensated Sun compass orientation in migratory monarch butterflies, that antennal clocks exist in monarchs, and that they likely provide the primary timing mechanism for Sun compass orientation. These unexpected findings pose a novel function for the antennae and open a …


Defining Behavioral And Molecular Differences Between Summer And Migratory Monarch Butterflies, Haisun Zhu, Robert Gegear, Amy Casselman, Sriramana Kanginakudru, Steven Reppert Dec 2015

Defining Behavioral And Molecular Differences Between Summer And Migratory Monarch Butterflies, Haisun Zhu, Robert Gegear, Amy Casselman, Sriramana Kanginakudru, Steven Reppert

Robert J. Gegear

BACKGROUND: In the fall, Eastern North American monarch butterflies (Danaus plexippus) undergo a magnificent long-range migration. In contrast to spring and summer butterflies, fall migrants are juvenile hormone deficient, which leads to reproductive arrest and increased longevity. Migrants also use a time-compensated sun compass to help them navigate in the south/southwesterly direction en route for Mexico. Central issues in this area are defining the relationship between juvenile hormone status and oriented flight, critical features that differentiate summer monarchs from fall migrants, and identifying molecular correlates of behavioral state. RESULTS: Here we show that increasing juvenile hormone activity to induce summer-like …