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. 2024 Oct 21;34(20):R1018-R1023.
doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2024.06.028.

Aerial electroreception

Affiliations

Aerial electroreception

Daniel Robert. Curr Biol. .

Abstract

Electroreception is the capacity of living organisms to detect the presence of electricity, usually studied in the aquatic environment. Electroreception in air, however, has received much less attention until relatively recently. Understanding how and why aerial electroreception may work requires a multidisciplinary framework, anchored in both the physics of static electricity and the ecology of sensory biology. In essence, the novel challenge arises from the fact that air is a much less conductive medium than water. Yet, recent research on terrestrial arthropods, including bees, flies, spiders, worms and caterpillars, has unveiled sensitivity to electric fields in different sensory ecological contexts. For each aerial organism considered thus far, filiform hairs and/or the antennae have been proposed to be the specialised sensory structures enabling detection based on both empirical and theoretical evidence. This newfound sensory modality reveals a previously unrecognised source of information, a new informational ecological niche integral to diverse life histories and navigational abilities, which remarkably involves animals, plants and atmospheric electricity (Figure 1). Understanding aerial electroreception in arthropods opens avenues for exploring their behaviour and ecology in diverse environments and sheds light on the evolution of sensory adaptations in terrestrial organisms. Because, as is known today, humans are not sensitive to weak electric fields, challenges arise in our comprehension of the elusive and discrete nature of aerial electric fields, and how they could be detected and used by terrestrial organisms.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of interests The author declares no competing interests.

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