Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2840833 | Journal of Insect Physiology | 2011 | 10 Pages |
Two types of mechanosensitive proprioceptor organ are present on the stinging apparatus of the honeybee: campaniform sensilla and mechanosensory hairplates. The campaniform sensilla are located on the surface of the tapering sting-shaft, which comprises an unpaired stylet and paired lancets. Each sensillum on the lancet differs from that on the stylet in terms of their topography and external morphology. The sensory afferents of the campaniform sensilla display slow-adapted firing responses to deformation of the cuticle that would be caused by the action of inserting the sting into a substrate, and their afferent signals induce and/or prolong the stinging response. By contrast, the mechanosensory hairplates are located at basal cuticular plates and on the posterior surface of the lancet valves. Two fields of hairplates on the second ramus at the ventral edge of the groove and on the antero-lateral edge of the oblong plate respond synchronously to protraction of the lancet. During the stinging response, these hairplates are likely to detect any sliding movement of the lancet and its position relative to the stylet. Afferent signals produced by them are likely to provide important information to the neuronal circuit for the generation and modulation of the stinging motor pattern.
Graphical abstractFigure optionsDownload full-size imageDownload as PowerPoint slideHighlights► Two types of mechano-proprioceptors were identified on honeybee stinging apparatus. ► Campaniform sensilla are located on surface of the sting barbs and tapering shaft. ► The campaniform sensilla detect deformation of the sting and induce the stinging response. ► Hairplates are located at skeletal plates moved during the stinging response. ► The hairplates detect stinging movements and modulate the stinging motor rhythm.