ausblenden:
Schlagwörter:
HONEYBEE APIS-MELLIFERA; SPODOPTERA-LITTORALIS LEPIDOPTERA;
AGROTIS-SEGETUM LEPIDOPTERA; ANTENNAL LOBE NEURONS; PHEROMONE COMMUNICATION; OLFACTORY MEMORY; TURNIP MOTH; NOCTUIDAE; MIXTURES;
DISCRIMINATION
Zusammenfassung:
Moths learn to associate a newer odor with a food reward after a few learning trials. Can a hungry, male moth learn to associate a sex attractant with food instead of with sex? We provided a hungry male with odors of single female sex pheromone components, of the full sex pheromone blend or of a newer odor component as cues in an appetitive learning assay. The male learned the single pheromone components just as well as the newer odor. Learning was, however, severely impaired when the full sex pheromone blend was used as conditioning stimulus. The "hard-wiring" between pheromone odor and sex thus seems to be restricted to those circumstances when the male moth experiences the full blend.