Steven Reppert (UMass) Part 1: Neurobiology of Monarch Butterfly Migration: Migration Overview

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  • Опубліковано 20 вер 2024
  • www.ibiology.o...
    Talk Overview:
    Reppert begins by describing the amazing long-distance migration of the Eastern North American Monarch butterfly. Each fall, several hundred million Monarchs fly up to 2500 miles from the eastern United States and southern Canada to a specific over-wintering area in central Mexico. How do the butterflies know when and where to fly? Reppert explains that the migration is directed largely by an innate sun compass.
    (In Part 1, the people who found the monarch over-wintering site were mistakenly identified as Ken and Karen Brugger. They were Ken and Catalina Brugger (now Catalina Trail).)
    In Part 2, Reppert focuses on the time-compensated sun compass system that guides the Monarch’s long migration. He describes how the butterfly eye can sense skylight cues used for directionality, including polarized UV light. This information is integrated in the central complex of the brain, which serves as the sun-compass, then is time compensated, and ultimately interacts with the motor system to control flight direction. While circadian clocks in the brain determine the seasonal migration of Monarchs, distinct circadian clocks in the antennae regulate time-compensation of the sun compass. Interestingly, work at the molecular level shows that the Monarch circadian clock mechanism is distinct and utilizes two cryptochrome (CRY) gene homologues; one previously found in Drosophila and one previously found in vertebrates.
    For more details of the monarch migration see reppertlab.org
    Speaker Biography:
    Steven Reppert received both his B.S. and M.D. degrees from the University of Nebraska. He did his clinical training in pediatrics at Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School and was a post-doctoral fellow at the NIH in the Section on Neuroendocrinology. He then joined the faculty of Harvard Medical School where he resided for 22 years before moving in 2001 to chair the Department of Neurobiology at the University of Massachusetts Medical School.
    For the first 23 years of his research career, Reppert’s work primarily focused on cellular and molecular mechanisms of circadian clocks in mammals. Since 2002, his research has shifted to understanding the biological basis of the long-distance migration of the Monarch butterfly with a focus on its navigational abilities and the role of its unique circadian clock. Reppert’s pioneering research has been recognized with numerous awards including an NIH MERIT award, election as a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the G.J. Mendel Honorary Medal for Merit in the Biological Sciences from the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic.
  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 12

  • @aaronTNGDS9
    @aaronTNGDS9 Рік тому

    Love your video sketching some basics of the neurobiology of Monarch migration. Very insightful and visually instructive.

  • @Latinistas
    @Latinistas 8 років тому +5

    This is terrific! Great summary--perfect tool for outreach. Missourians for Monarchs - Naturalists & Gardeners thanks you!

  • @keithdecesare653
    @keithdecesare653 2 роки тому

    This needs a million views

  • @ptitprince7575
    @ptitprince7575 8 років тому +3

    Remarkable video.

  • @education461
    @education461 3 роки тому +1

    Five comments on this and hundreds on videos about crap! The day we can't see butterflies anymore, we will see how important they are for our planet!

  • @catalinatrail6422
    @catalinatrail6422 7 років тому +2

    Please correct my name. I am Catalina Brugger who was with my husband Ken Brugger during the discovery of the Monarch Butterfly overwintering sites in Mexico. You are calling me Karen.

    • @scicommlab
      @scicommlab  7 років тому +2

      Dear Catalina,
      On behalf of iBiology and Dr. Reppert, we apologize for making a mistake with your name. You made a wonderful discovery and deserve to be credited. We have added a sentence to the description of the talk correcting this mistake and acknowledging your contribution. Thank you for bringing it to our attention.
      Sincerely,
      The iBiology Team

    • @riverbankmactavishmcghee4573
      @riverbankmactavishmcghee4573 4 роки тому

      I have only just discovered you today and yes, you made a wonderful discovery and yes, you deserve to be credited. Thank you for your good work. We are in Southern Ontario, Canada and we have over 10 hectares of milkweed. I am planning a trip to Michoacan early in '21. Muchisimas gracias Catalina y que te vaya bien.

  • @aasally7849
    @aasally7849 3 роки тому

    Thank you for this information. Trying to do my part to help.

  • @TheRomerolagus
    @TheRomerolagus 5 років тому

    One correction... Mostly fir forests (Abies religiosa), not pine forests.

  • @saschafriedrich7041
    @saschafriedrich7041 4 роки тому

    LE U OWL oO

  • @pollyhorlander7389
    @pollyhorlander7389 3 роки тому

    Not. Climate. Change! Good grief.