Summary
A pair of antagonistic thermal receptors has been identified in each of two long, tapering, poreless setae located distally on the foreleg tarsi of the tropicalbont tick,Amblyomma variegatum (Fig. 1). One, the cold receptor, responds to a rapiddrop in temperature (T) with a sudden rise in impulse frequency (F). The other, a warm receptor, responds to a rapidrise inT with a sudden rise inF (Figs. 2, 4). These two units are unusual for sharing their seta with two other units which are mechanosensitive. The four are distinguishable on the basis of spike amplitude and form (Fig. 3). Hence the thermal sensitivity displayed is hardly attributable to the pair of cells with tubular bodies but rather to the two extending up into the seta (for structure, see Hess and Vlimant 1982, 1983 a).
As based on the first 100 ms of the response, differential sensitivity to rapidT change is −16.1± 10.4 (imp/s)/°C for cold units, 17.6 ± 9.5 (imp/s)/°C for warm (Table 1). As progressively larger segments of the spike train are employed to determineF, differential sensitivity of the warm unit drops off much more quickly than that of the cold (Table 2, Figs. 5, 6). In the cold unit resolving power (the difference in rapid temperature change discriminable with 90% probability by a pair of responses of a single unit at average sensitivity) continues to increase as the segment of the spike train determiningF is lengthened (from 0.58 °C for 100 ms segments to 0.41 °C for 1,100 ms segments). Resolving power of the warm unit, on the other hand, tends to decrease as longer segments are employed (from 0.52 °C for the first 100 ms to 0.80 °C for the first 1,100 ms). These relationships provoke the question of whether the spike trains may be evaluated in the CNS in different fashions.
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Abbreviations
- b :
-
slope of characteristic curve
- F :
-
impulse frequency in impulses per second (imp/s)
- n :
-
number of individuals examined
- Pw :
-
partial pressure of water vapor in Torr
- r :
-
correlation coefficient
- s :
-
SD of responses from characteristic curve
- SD :
-
standard deviation
- T :
-
temperature in °C
- ΔT :
-
difference inT Refers to difference between initial and end temperature in abruptT changes
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Hess, E., Loftus, R. Warm and cold receptors of two sensilla on the foreleg tarsi of the tropical bont tickAmblyomma variegatum . J. Comp. Physiol. 155, 187–195 (1984). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00612636
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00612636