@article{oai:ir.soken.ac.jp:00004182, author = {蟻川, 謙太郎 and ARIKAWA, Kentaro and SUYAMA, Daisuke and FUJII, Takanori}, issue = {4}, journal = {Journal of Comparative Physiology A, Journal of Comparative Physiology A}, month = {Mar}, note = {1. Butterflies have two pairs of extraocular photoreceptive neurons on the genitalia. Here we report that the genital photoreceptors have a crucial role in achieving copulation. 2. We first investigated mating behavior of the butterfly Papilio xuthus in an outdoor cage. The mating behavior consists of six steps: the male approaches the female (1), maneuvers into a ventor-to-ventor position with the female (2), searches the female's genitalia (3), clasps the genitalia (4), the pair copulates (5), and finally separates (6). 3. We bilaterally ablated the P1 pair of photoreceptors, in the males, and observed mating behavior with virgin females. Of the intact males 66% copulated successfully, whereas only about 25% of the treated males could copulate. About 40% of P1 ablated males stopped the mating behavior during step 3: the males could not locate the female's genitalia. P1 ablation in females did not have a clear effect in this study. 4. Electrophysiological measurements showed that the P1 response of a male drops sharply when it correctly locates the female's genitalia. We hypothesize that the sharp drop in the P1 response informs the male that the female's vagina is correctly positioned for penis insertion. The P1 ablated males never experience such␣a␣response drop, as there is no P1 response to begin with.}, pages = {295--299}, title = {Hindsight by genitalia: Photo-guided copulation in butterflies}, volume = {180}, year = {1997} }