How flies establish their cruising altitude
August 20th, 2010 - 4:54 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Aug 20 (ANI): Scientists have shed new light on how insects in flight calculate and control their height above the ground.
The flies establish an altitude set point on the basis of nearby horizontal edges and tend to fly at the same height as those features, researchers said.
“Flying at a horizontal edge formed by local features-the top of a bush or a tree, say-could be a good way to lead into the perch. This is a good mechanism for landing at the tops of things as flies do-something you can confirm with a glass of wine,” said Michael Dickinson of the California Institute of Technology
Researchers had earlier suggested that insects might control their cruising altitude by maintaining a fixed value of what’s known as optic flow beneath them as they fly.
To understand what this means, imagine how fast the ground moves beneath you when you are taking off in an airplane and how that motion of things beneath you slows as you make your way up into the air.
“There are simple means by which an insect could know whether it is falling or rising. but by measuring the optic flow beneath it, an insect could choose to fly at a specific altitude,” Dickinson said
The strategy has been shown to work on a tiny model helicopter, but it turns out the fruit flies don’t use it, or at least not under the conditions tested.
The researchers figured this out thanks to a sophisticated “gizmo” built by Andrew Straw, also of Caltech, that allowed them to track the movements of free-flying fruit flies using multiple digital cameras as they moved through a 3D virtual-reality space in which the researchers had complete control over what the insects saw.
The researchers could even cancel out the effects of the flies’ own movement on what they saw as they flew through space, allowing them to put the optic ground flow theory to the test in a rigorous way.
“All of us set out thinking that the ground flow model was probably right. We thought we would end up quickly verifying that it worked, but when we found it didn’t apply, we began to think about other mechanism,” Straw said.
So the researchers tried something else, presenting the flies with a simple horizontal edge while they flew. It turned out the flies used that visual reference point to select their altitude. Experiments that pitted the edge tracking and optic flow models against each other confirmed that the insects didn’t care how fast the ground moved beneath them.
The results also provide confirmation of two other strategies that flies use to keep themselves stable and avoid collisions. If they see the world around them “moving”-for instance, if they are pushed down by a gust of wind-they will alter their flight to compensate.
If the world beneath them appears to rapidly expand, as it would if they were hurtling toward the ground, they veer up to avoid crashing. Both of these mechanisms help maintain stability, but they don’t set a specific altitude, the researchers said.
The findings might have practical applications, he added. For example, they could come in handy for working out the ideal rules of operation for flying robots.
The study has been reported online on August 19 in Current Biology, a Cell Press publication. (ANI)
- Air Force scientists study flying insects' altitude control mechanisms - Dec 08, 2010
- Insects watch skies to navigate - Jan 18, 2012
- Birds could better pilot-less aircraft - Oct 29, 2011
- 'New vision' tweaks drones' ability to fly precisely - Dec 13, 2011
- Mechanical insects to take flight on 3D printed wings! - Mar 21, 2011
- Flying fish 'perform as well as some birds' - Sep 12, 2010
- Moths can hitch a ride on jet streams to get to warmer climes - Feb 05, 2010
- Brain-cell activity in flying fruit flies - Feb 15, 2010
- Fruit flies' 'sniffing techniques' pave way for new insect repellents - Sep 23, 2010
- Tiny insect brains capable of giant feats - Jun 12, 2010
- Insects extremely clever despite tiny brains: Study - Jun 12, 2010
- Invisible infrared light could soon activate heart, ear cells - Mar 28, 2011
- 'Bugs can be tweaked into powerhouses' - Jan 09, 2012
- How bees always manage to land safely - Dec 23, 2009
- Insects can sense danger on mammals' breath - Aug 10, 2010
Tags: california institute of technology, caltech, complete control, cruising altitude, digital cameras, flow model, flow theory, gizmo, glass of wine, ground flow, horizontal edge, horizontal edges, insect, insects, michael dickinson, model helicopter, optic flow, technology researchers, tiny model, virtual reality space