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Biol. Bull. 208: 12-19. (February 2005)
© 2005 Marine Biological Laboratory

Behavioral and Electrophysiological Experiments Suggest That the Antennular Outer Flagellum Is the Site of Pheromone Reception in the Male Helmet Crab Telmessus cheiragonus

Michiya Kamio1,*, Makoto Araki2, Toshiki Nagayama2, Shigeki Matsunaga1 and Nobuhiro Fusetani1

1 Laboratory of Aquatic Natural Products Chemistry, Graduate School of Agricultural and Life Sciences, The University of Tokyo, 1-1-1 Yayoi, Bunkyo-ku Tokyo 113-8657, Japan
2 Hokkaido University, Division of Biological Science, Graduate School of Science, Sapporo, Hokkaido 060, Japan

* To whom correspondence should be sent at Georgia State University, Department of Biology, P.O. Box 4010, Atlanta, GA 30302-4010. E-mail: mkamio{at}gsu.edu

Sexually competent females of Telmessus cheiragonus (helmet crab) release two pheromones that elicit grasping and copulation behaviors in males (Kamio et al., 2000, 2002, 2003). Our study aimed to use behavioral and electrophysiological techniques to identify the site of reception of these sex pheromones. In behavioral experiments, either the inner or the outer flagella of the antennules were ablated bilaterally from male crabs, and responses of male crabs to female odor were examined. When the inner flagella were surgically ablated, the sexual response (i.e., grasping and copulation behavior) of male crabs was not significantly changed relative to control animals that had their second antennae ablated. In contrast, the sexual response was significantly reduced when the outer flagella of the antennules were ablated, suggesting that the outer flagellum is the receptor organ that detects the sex pheromones. In electrophysiological experiments, urine, which in females contains the pheromone that elicits grasping behavior by males but does not contain the pheromone eliciting copulation, whose release site is not known, was tested. Female and male urine as well as shrimp extract evoked phasic responses of chemosensory afferents innervating aesthetasc sensilla on the outer flagellum of male crabs. The response of the afferents had significantly higher magnitude and lower threshold when female urine was applied. Thus, behavioral and electrophysiological observations suggest that in male helmet crabs, the outer flagellum of the antennule is the chemosensory organ that detects female sex pheromone.




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