Case Western Reserve scientists study acrobatic maneuvers of common flesh flies, offer first proofs of 70-year-old theory on nervous system controlling body rotations
A common flesh fly takes off and maneuvers effortlessly, her head and body steadied by a hidden, minuscule gyroscope-like structure that gives these flies unparalleled balance. That same fly—with those specialized structures, known as “halteres,” now surgically removed—takes off again, but immediately begins to tumble wildly about, unable to right herself or tell up from down, side from side. So what’s happening? Why does it matter? And what might it mean for us? Case Western Reserve University’s Alexandra Yarger, a PhD candidate in biology and first author on a new paper published in September in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B, has some of the answers to those questions. Yarger studies the electrical activity of neurons in the haltere structure, which was once a second set of wings, but transformed by millions of years of evolution into what serves as the unseen balancing system. Her discoveries might someday help us build more responsive drones or better-balanced robots, said Jessica Fox, assistant professor of biology at Case Western Reserve and Yarger’s mentor on the project. Her lab has been studying the behavior of flies and how sensory systems process information since 2013. “We had already demonstrated in a 2015 paper what flies actually do with their halteres when moving around and in this paper, we’ve asked what their nervous systems do with that information,” she said.Advancing the long history of fly science

For more information, contact Mike Scott at mike.scott@case.edu. This article was originally published Oct. 12, 2018.