“…Some of these peripheral clocks depend on the clock located in the brain, others are self-sustained oscillators, autonomously ticking with respect to the master clock, as nicely demonstrated in the dipteran D. melanogaster ( Plautz et al, 1997 ). Throughout expression studies and/or physiological analyses, peripheral clocks have been detected in different adult structures, such as eyes, antennae, thorax, abdomen, flight muscles, midgut, testis, and legs ( Sauman and Reppert, 1996 ; Wise et al, 2002 ; Iwai et al, 2006 ; Schuckel et al, 2007 ; Merlin et al, 2009 ; Yan et al, 2014 , 2019 ; Kobelková et al, 2015 ; Figure 3B ). Here, we will focus on peripheral clocks located in the eye, antenna, and testis, for which most of the data are available.…”