Dragonflies are straight “A” hunters, capturing fruit flies in
mid-air about 95 percent of the time, a grade that puts a
head-of-the-class predator like a lion to shame.
The insect’s efficiency—combined with hackable biology (less moving
parts—i.e., neurons) compared to any mammal big or small—makes the
dragonfly an alluring organism to study the neural underpinnings of a
basic but still complex behavior like prey capture.
Intrigued by the dragonfly, biologist Anthony Leonardo
and colleagues from Intan Technologies and Duke University set about
creating the instrumentation that will enable the researchers to monitor
the activity of a group of neurons in the species Libellula lydia that appear to be essential for guiding the hunt. This
summer, Leonardo’s group at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s
Janelia Farm Research campus in Virginia wants to demonstrate what
happens in the dragonfly’s nervous system during the course of carrying
out a complex behavior—zooming in for the kill—over the second or so
that it unfolds. “The dragonfly catches moving flies in the air,”
Leonardo says. “In the process of doing that, it has to think of a
moving fly or mosquito and think about where it’s going, where it is
now, where it’s going to be in the future how its own body works and
that kind of goal is constantly changing.”
Carrying out these experiments requires both tracking the dragonfly
and devising the necessary instrumentation to monitor the 16 neurons
hypothesized to steer the insect’s movements as it closes in on a Drosophila.
The team was able to successfully outfit dragonflies with a set of
small reflective balls on the head and wings to track them as they move
through an insect version of the Roman Coliseum where they feast away on
fruit flies.
The hard part is yet to come during coming months when the insects will be equipped with backpacks
that can record signals from brain cells when going after a fly and
then transmit them by a radio signal to a computer for analysis. A
dragonfly weighs 400 milligrams, less than half the weight of a paper
clip, so building a backpack that would not pin the insect to the ground
or radically change its behavior is a major challenge.
The smallest practical battery for the telemetry in the backpack
would have totaled about a third the weight of the dragonfly, and might
have dampened the insect’s ardor for the hunt. So Leonardo and team
designed a 40-milligran backpack that is powered by energy from radio
waves. By doing so, they can record from the insect’s steering neurons
that guide it during prey capture—the garb should enable monitoring
other groups of neurons as well. The backpack has tiny wires, miniature
sensors, that connect to the ventral nerve cord, the dragonfly
equivalent of a spinal cord. The backpack should be able to transmit 5
megabits per second of information about what the insect’s neurons are
doing as it descends upon its lunch.
If these tests go as planned, the work will provide new insights into
how circuits operate during dynamic neural processes that take in
sensory information and process it to make decisions about future
actions. “Our hope is that what we learn about the dragonfly will be
broadly applicable to how neurons solve problems in general, Leonardo
says. “This is a broad class of computation problems that nervous
systems have to solve—and in some what they’ve evolved to solve.”
By: Gary Stix
http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/talking-back/2013/06/17/dragonflies-with-backpacks-may-advance-the-science-of-prey-capture/
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