Authors
James R Carey, Nikos Papadopoulos, Nikos Kouloussis, Byron Katsoyannos, Hans-Georg Müller, Jane-Ling Wang, Yi-Kuan Tseng
Publication date
2006/1/1
Journal
Experimental gerontology
Volume
41
Issue
1
Pages
93-97
Publisher
Pergamon
Description
Patterns of behavior were recorded every 10min during a 2-h period each day from eclosion to death for individual Drosophila melanogaster (both sexes) and Ceratitis capitata (males-only) including walking, preening, feeding, flying, and resting for the former species, and walking, calling (signaling), supine (upside-down), and resting in the latter. Results reveal that, with the exception of preening in D. melanogaster, behavioral patterns are age-specific and the frequency of several behaviors (e.g. supine in medfly; walking and resting in D. melanogaster) are correlated with time-to-death. This is the first set of studies to report the age patterns over a range of behavioral categories throughout the lives of individuals and thus the first that systematically documents the behavior of individuals at advanced ages. We suggest that the new and unique behaviors (e.g. supine) that emerge from the aging process be referred to …
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