Neural basis of a pollinator's buffet: Olfactory specialization and learning in Manduca sexta

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Abstract

Pollinators exhibit a range of innate and learned behaviors that mediate interactions with flowers, but the olfactory bases of these responses in a naturalistic context remain poorly understood. The hawkmoth Manduca sexta is an important pollinator for many night-blooming flowers but can learn - through olfactory conditioning - to visit other nectar resources. Analysis of the flowers that are innately attractive to moths shows that the scents all have converged on a similar chemical profile that, in turn, is uniquely represented in the moth's antennal (olfactory) lobe. Flexibility in visitation to nonattractive flowers, however, is mediated by octopamine-associated modulation of antennal-lobe neurons during learning. Furthermore, this flexibility does not extinguish the innate preferences. Such processing of stimuli through two olfactory channels, one involving an innate bias and the other a learned association, allows the moths to exist within a dynamic floral environment while maintaining specialized associations.

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Riffell, J. A., Lei, H., Abrell, L., & Hildebrand, J. G. (2013). Neural basis of a pollinator’s buffet: Olfactory specialization and learning in Manduca sexta. Science, 339(6116), 200–204. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1225483

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