“…At present, cLSM studies are the basis for establishing representative standard brains (e.g., standardized references of brain neuropils) for insects (whole-mounts or sectioned brains), e.g., the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster (Rein et al, 2002), the sphinx moth Manduca sexta (Huetteroth and Schachtner, 2005;El Jundi et al, 2009;Huetteroth et al, 2010), the desert locust Schistocerca gregaria (Kurylas et al, 2008), the honey bee Apis mellifera (Galizia et al, 1999;Brandt et al, 2005), and the flour beetle Tribolium castaneum (Dreyer et al, 2010). However, penetration of antibodies and the depth of laser penetration into tissue thicker than 500 mm are limiting factors, and artifacts due to high zerrors and constraints of the objective (e.g., numerical aperture, immersion media, operation distance) cause heavy signal reductions (Wanninger, 2007;Smolla et al, 2014). Furthermore, this method entails extensive tissue preparation steps, which are very timeconsuming.…”