On warm sunny days female hoverflies are often observed feeding from a wide range of wild and cultivated flowers. In doing so, hoverflies serve a vital role as alternative pollinators, and suggested to be the most important after bees and bumblebees. Unless the flower hoverflies are feeding from is large, they do not readily share the space with other insects, but instead opt to leave. We have used high-speed videography followed by 3D reconstruction of flight trajectories to quantify how female Eristalis hoverflies respond to approaching bees, wasps and two different hoverfly species. We found that in 94% of the interactions the occupant female left the flower when approached by another insect. We found that compared to spontaneous take-offs, the occupant hoverfly's escape response was performed at ∼3 times higher speed (spontaneous take-off at 0.2±0.05 m/s compared with 0.55±0.08 m/s when approached by another Eristalis). The hoverflies tended to take off upward and forward, while taking the incomer's approach angle into account. Intriguingly, we found when approached by wasps that the occupant Eristalis took off at a higher speed and when the wasp was further away. This suggests that feeding hoverflies may be able to distinguish these predators, demanding impressive visual capabilities. Our results, including quantification of the visual information available before occupant take-off, provide important insight into how freely behaving hoverflies perform escape responses from competitors and predators (e.g. wasps) in the wild.
Visual approach computation in feeding hoverflies
Currently Viewing Accepted Manuscript - Newer Version Available
Malin Thyselius, Paloma Gonzalez-Bellido, Trevor Wardill, Karin Nordström; Visual approach computation in feeding hoverflies. J Exp Biol 2018; jeb.177162. doi: https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.177162
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