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1.
Electroretinogram (ERG) flicker photometry was used to study the spectral mechanisms in the retinas of white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) and fallow deer (Dama dama). In addition to having a rod pigment with maximum sensitivity (max) of about 497 nm, both species appear to have two classes of photopic receptors. They share in common a short-wavelength-sensitive cone mechanism having max in the region of 450–460 nm. Each also has a cone having peak sensitivity in the middle wavelengths, but these differ slightly for the two species. In white-tailed deer the max of this cone is about 537 nm; for the fallow deer the average max value for this mechanism was 542 nm. Deer resemble other ungulates and many other types of mammal in having two classes of cone pigment and, thus, the requisite retinal basis for dichromatic color vision.Abbreviations ERG electroretinogram - LWS long wavelength sensitive - MWS middle wavelength sensitive - SWS short wavelength sensitive  相似文献   

2.
Summary The electroretinographic visual spectral sensitivity functions in day-active fireflies Lucidota luteicollis and Lucidota atra show a broad green sensitivity and a shoulder in the near-ultraviolet region of the spectrum (Figs. 1, 2) as is commonly found among day-active insects. The nomogram for P530 visual pigment matches the spectral sensitivity curves in the green. The adult L. luteicollis retains its larval bioluminescent light organ which has a peak emission at 562 nm. The max of the ERG spectral sensitivity does not match the bioluminescent peak (Fig. 1B) as it does in twilight- and dark-active fireflies. Some relevant behavioural observations with respect to mating are presented.  相似文献   

3.
To examine the influence of the spectral characteristics of underwater light on spectral sensitivity of the ON and OFF visual pathways, compound action potential recordings were made from retinal ganglion cells of threespine stickleback from different photic regimes. In fish from a red-shifted photic regime (P50 680 nm for downwelling light at 1m), peak sensitivity of both the ON and OFF pathways was limited to long wavelength light (max 600–620). In contrast, the ON pathway of fish from a comparatively blue-shifted (P50 566 nm) photic regime exhibited sensitivity to medium (max 540–560) and long (max 600 nm) wavelengths, while the OFF pathway exhibited peak sensitivity to only medium (max 540 nm) wavelength light. In a third population, where the the ambient light is moderately red-shifted (P50 629 nm), the ON pathway once again exhibited only a long wavelength sensitivity peak at 620 nm, while the OFF pathway exhibited sensitivity to both medium (max 560 nm) and long (max 600–620 nm) wavelength light. These findings suggest that the photic environment plays an integral role in shaping spectral sensitivity of the ON and OFF pathways.  相似文献   

4.
The visual pigment of a stomatopod crustacean,Squilla empusa   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Summary Stomatopod crustaceans are visually active animals which have large, mobile compound eyes of unique design. Aspects of their ecology and behavior suggest they may be able to discriminate hues. Isolated rhabdoms of the squillid stomatopod,Squilla empusa, were investigated using microspectrophotometry and fluorometry. A single rhodopsin, of max507 nm, exists in the main rhabdom. Its stable metarhodopsin, with max503 nm, possesses typical arthropod fluorescence characteristics. No evidence was found for a visual pigment with peak absorption in the ultraviolet. Vision in this animal might therefore be monochromatic.Abbreviation ASW artificial sea water  相似文献   

5.
The visual pigment and visual cycle of the lobster,Homarus   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Summary The visual pigment of the American lobster,Homarus americanus, has been studied in individual isolated rhabdoms by microspectrophotometry. Lobster rhodopsin has max at 515 nm and is converted by light to a stable metarhodopsin with max at 490 nm. These figures are in good agreement with corresponding values obtained by Wald and Hubbard (1957) in digitonin extracts. Photoregeneration of rhodopsin to metarhodopsin is also observed. The absorbance spectrum of lobster metarhodopsin is invariant with pH in the range 5.4–9, indicating that even after isomerization of the chromophore fromcis totrans, the binding site of the chromophore remains sequestered from the solvent environment. Total axial density of the lobster rhabdom to unpolarized light is about 0.7.As described for several other Crustacea, aldehyde fixation renders the metarhodopsin susceptible to photobleaching, a process that is faster at alkaline than at neutral or acid pH. Small amounts of a photoproduct with max at 370 nm are occasionally seen. A slower dark bleaching of lobster rhabdoms (1/2–2 h) also occurs, frequently through intermediates with absorption similar to metarhodopsin.The molar extinction coefficient of metarhodopsin is about 1.2 times greater than that of rhodopsin, each measured at their respective max. Isomerization of the chromophore fromcis totrans is accompanied by a change in the orientation of the absorption vector of about 3°. The absorption vector of metarhodopsin is either tilted more steeply into the membrane or is less tightly oriented with respect to the microvillar axes.When living lobsters are kept at room temperature, light adaptation does not result in an accumulation of metarhodopsin. At 4 °C, however, the same adapting lights cause a reduction of rhodopsin and an increase in metarhodopsin. There is thus a temperature-sensitive regeneration mechanism that supplements photoregeneration. Following 1 ms, 0.1 joule xenon flashes that convert about 70% of the rhodopsin to metarhodopsin in vivo, dark regeneration occurs in the living eye with half-times of about 25 and 55 min at 22 °C and 15 °C respectively.This work was supported by USPHS research grant EY 00222 to Yale University. S.N.B. was aided by NIH Postdoctoral Fellowship EY 52378.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Spectral sensitivity functions S() of single photoreceptor cells in 43 different hymenopteran species were measured intracellularly with the fast spectral scan method. The distribution of maximal sensitivity values (max) shows 3 major peaks at 340 nm, 430 nm and 535 nm and a small peak at 600 nm. Predictions about the colour vision systems of the different hymenopteran species are derived from the spectral sensitivities by application of a receptor model of colour vision and a model of two colour opponent channels. Most of the species have a trichromatic colour vision system. Although the S() functions are quite similar, the predicted colour discriminability curves differ in their relative height of best discriminability in the UV-blue or bluegreen area of the spectrum, indicating that relatively small differences in the S() functions may have considerable effects on colour discriminability. Four of the hymenopteran insects tested contain an additional R-receptor with maximal sensitivity around 600 nm. The R-receptor of the solitary bee Callonychium petuniae is based on a pigment (P596) with a long max, whereas in the sawfly Tenthredo campestris the G-receptor appears to act as filter to a pigment (P570), shifting its max value to a longer wavelength and narrowing its bandwidth. Evolutionary and life history constraints (e.g. phylogenetic relatedness, social or solitary life, general or specialized feeding behaviour) appear to have no effect on the S() functions. The only effect is found in UV receptors, for which max values at longer wavelengths are found in bees flying predominantly within the forest.  相似文献   

7.
We report on the lens pigmentation and visual pigments of 52 species of demersal deep-sea fishes caught at depths ranging from 480 m to 4110 m in the Porcupine Seabight and Goban Spur area of the North-eastern Atlantic. Only one species, caught between 480 and 840 m, had a lens with large amounts of pigment, consistent with the hypothesis that heavily pigmented lenses in deep-sea fish serve to enhance the contrast of bioluminescent signals by removing much of the background radiance, which is only visible to fish living shallower than 1000 m. Low concentrations of lens pigmentation were also observed in a further two species (Rouleina attrita and Micromesisteus poutassou). The retinae of all species except five, contained only a single visual pigment, as determined by microspectrophotometry of individual rods, and/or spectrophotometry of retinal wholemounts and retinal extracts. Those fishes caught between 500 m and 1100 m had wavelengths of peak sensitivity (max) ranging from 476 nm to 494 nm, while most fish living below 1100 m tended to be more conservative with (max) values ranging from 475 nm to 485 nm. The only exceptions to this were three deep-living species caught between 1600 m and 2000 m whose retinae contain abnormally short-wave sensitive visual pigments (Cataetyx laticepsmax 468 nm; Alepocephalus bairdiimax 467 nm; Narcetes stomias max 472 nm), suggesting adaptation for the detection of short-wave bioluminescence.  相似文献   

8.
Summary Isolated dark-adapted rhabdoms from the spider crab Libinia emarginata were examined by microspectrophotometry to determine the visual pigments present and their light-sensitive characteristics. The rhabdoms contain a single pigment with max=493 nm. Upon one minute irradiation with bright orange light this pigment forms a light-stable photoproduct with nearly the same max as the parent pigment but with slightly greater absorption to the long wavelength side of the absorption peak. On exposure to orange or yellow light in the presence of 5% glutaraldehyde, however, the pigment of Libinia rhabdoms bleaches slowly.The photosensitive pigment of properly oriented, transversely illuminated rhabdoms shows isotropic and dichroic regions, corresponding to layers of the rhabdom in which the microvilli are respectively parallel and perpendicular to the direction of propagation of the measuring beam. The maximum dichroic ratio is about 2, with most absorption when the plane of polarization is parallel to the microvillar axes.
Zusammenfassung Die isolierten, dunkeladaptierten Rhabdome von Libinia emarginata wurden mikrospektrophotometrisch untersucht, um die Sehfarbstoffe und ihre lichtempfindlichen Eigenschaften zu entdecken. Die Rhabdome enthalten ein einziges Pigment (max 493 nm). Nach einer Bestrahlungszeit von 1 min mit hellem orangem Licht entsteht ein lichtfestes Photoprodukt mit beinahe dem gleichen max wie das ursprüngliche Pigment, aber mit etwas größerer Absorption gegen die langwellige Seite des Absorptionsmaximums hin. Das Pigment von Libinia-Rhabdomen bleicht langsam aus, wenn man es orangem oder gelbem Licht in Gegenwart von 5% Glutaraldehyd aussetzt.Werden richtig orientierte Rhabdome von der Seite belichtet, so zeigt das lichtempfindliche Pigment teils Isotropismus teils Dichroismus. Im ersten Fall sind die Mikrovilli parallel zur Richtung des Meßstrahles orientiert, im zweiten Fall stehen sie senkrecht dazu. Das größte Dichroismus-Verhältnis liegt bei 2. Man erhält die größte Absorption, wenn die Polarisationsrichtung parallel zur Achse der Mikrovilli steht.


This work was supported by U.S.P.H.S. grant NB-03333. Some of the experiments were done at The Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Mass.  相似文献   

9.
1.  Underwater downwelling quantal irradiance spectra were measured in estuarine and coastal areas under various tidal and rainfall conditions. At midday the available spectrum near the bottom has maximal irradiance in the region of about 570 to 700 nm in the estuary, whereas in offshore coastal areas greatest irradiance occurs between 500 and 570 nm. At twilight in an estuary, maximal underwater downwelling irradiance shifts to the 490–520 nm region.
2.  The visual pigment absorption maxima of 27 species of benthic crustaceans from semi-terrestrial, estuarine and coastal areas have values ranging from 483 to 516 nm. There is no obvious shift in the max from long wavelengths in estuarine species to shorter wavelengths in coastal species. The only match between max and midday spectrum was for a continental shelf species,Geryon quinquedens.
3.  The Sensitivity Hypothesis is predicted to account for the visual sensitivity of benthic crabs from estuarine and coastal areas. To assess the match between visual spectral sensitivity and environmental spectra, photon capture effectiveness was calculated for a range of idealized visual pigment absorption functions operating in the measured environmental spectra.
4.  All crab species are poorly adapted for maximal photon capture at midday, since pigments having max longer than 540 nm function best under all daytime spectral conditions. Photon capture of visual pigments with max near 500 nm improves dramatically at twilight, particularly at lower visual pigment densities and shallow depths. However, pigments having max at wavelengths longer than those for the crabs are equally or more efficient at photon capture. Therefore the Sensitivity Hypothesis is not supported for crustaceans.
  相似文献   

10.
Although tropical coral reefs are one of the most spectrally complex habitats, there is relatively little known about colour vision of reef fish. In this study, we measured the spectral sensitivity of an endemic Hawaiian coral reef fish, Thalassoma duperrey (family Labridae), and assessed the possible role of visual sensitivity in mediating intraspecific communication. Electrophysiological recordings of compound action potentials from retinal ganglion cells were used to generate spectral sensitivity curves for specific wavelengths (380–620nm). We found at least 2 sensitivity peaks for the on response (max=460, 550nm). The off response lacked a short wavelength mechanism but a medium wavelength mechanism (max=545nm) and a longwave mechanism (max=570nm) were found. To quantify the visual stimulus provided by a conspecific individual, spectral reflectance from the colour pattern of T. duperrey was measured with a spectroradiometer. Luminance and spectral contrast were computed between colour patches of the pattern and between the patches and natural backgrounds (i.e., water and coral). Reflectance from the blue head and contrast from the blue, green and red patches matched the sensitivity maxima of T. duperrey, although this depended on the type of background. Our results indicate that T. duperrey should be able to visually detect the colour pattern of a conspecific fish and that T. duperrey's visual system is designed to enhance target detection in the coral reef habitat with matched and offset cone mechanisms.  相似文献   

11.
Summary The absorption maxima ( max) of the visual pigments in the ommatidia ofNotonecta glauca were found by measuring the difference spectra of single rhabdomeres after alternating illumination with two different adaptation wavelengths. All the peripheral rhabdomeres contain a pigment with an extinction maximum at 560 nm. This pigment is sensitive to red light up to wavelengths > 700 nm. In a given ommatidium in the dorsal region of the eye, the two central rhabdomeres both contain one of two pigments, either a pigment with an absorption maximum in the UV, at 345 nm, or — in neighboring rhabdoms — a pigment with an absorption maximum at 445 nm. In the ventral part of the eye only the pigment absorbing maximally in the UV was found in the central rhabdomeres. The spectral absorption properties of various types of screening-pigment granules were measured.  相似文献   

12.
Birds have four spectrally distinct types of single cones that they use for colour vision. It is often desirable to be able to model the spectral sensitivities of the different cone types, which vary considerably between species. However, although there are several mathematical models available for describing the spectral absorption of visual pigments, there is no model describing the spectral absorption of the coloured oil droplets found in three of the four single cone types. In this paper, we describe such a model and illustrate its use in estimating the spectral sensitivities of single cones. Furthermore, we show that the spectral locations of the wavelengths of maximum absorbance (max) of the short- (SWS), medium- (MWS) and long- (LWS) wavelength-sensitive visual pigments and the cut-off wavelengths (cut) of their respective C-, Y- and R-type oil droplets can be predicted from the max of the ultraviolet- (UVS)/violet- (VS) sensitive visual pigment.  相似文献   

13.
Summary The deep-sea bioluminescent squid, Watasenia scintillans, has three visual pigments: The major one (A1 pigment) is based on retinal and has max = 484 nm, the second one (A2 pigment) is based on 3-dehydroretinal and has max = 500 nm, and the third one (A4 pigment) is based on 4-hydroxyretinal and has max = 470 nm. The distribution of these 3 visual pigments in the retina was studied by HPLC analysis of the retinals in retina slices obtained by microdissection. It was found that A1 pigment was not located in the specific region of the ventral retina receiving the down-welling light which contains very long photoreceptor cells, forming two strata. A2 and A4 pigment were found exclusively in the proximal pinkish stratum and in the distal yellowish stratum. The role of these pigments in the retina is hypothesized to involve spectral discrimination. The extraction and analysis of retinoids to determine the origin of 3-dehydroretinal and 4-hydroxyretinal in the mature squid showed only a trace amount of 4-hydroxyretinol in the eggs. Similar analysis of other cephalopods collected near Japan showed the absence of A2 or A4 pigment in their eyes.Abbreviations HPLC high-performance liquid chromatography - IS inner segment - OS outer segment  相似文献   

14.
Summary With the aid of a microspectrophotometer the visual pigments and oil globules in the retina of the emu (Dromiceius novae-hollandiae), the brushland tinamou (Nothoprocta c. cinerascens) and the Chilean tinamou (Nothoprocta perdicaria sanborni) were characterized. All three of these palaeognathous birds contain in their rods a typical rhodopsin with max near 500 nm. Each of these birds has cones containing iodopsin-like visual pigments with max in the 560–570 nm spectral region. No unequivocal evidence was obtained for the presence of cone pigments other than this iodopsin-like pigment, although one cell thought to be a cone, and containing a visual pigment with max near 498 nm, was observed in the retina of the brushland tinamou. The oil globule systems of the three palaeognathous species are identical to each other and are much simpler than is typical for neognathous birds in that only two different types of globule are present, one with T50 at 508 nm and another with T50 at 568 nm. Comparison of the data with observations made on neognathous species indicates (1) that palaeognathous birds probably have poorer color discrimination capabilities than neognathous birds and (2) that the tinamou is more closely related to the ratites than to the galliform species.This study was supported, in part, by NIH Grant No. EY01839 (A.J. Sillman), NIH Grant No. EY00323 (W.N. McFarland) and NSF Grant No. 78-07657 (E.R. Loew). The authors thank E. Clinite, R. Dunford, C. Murphy, R. Riis and D. Weathers for their valuable assistance. Thanks also go to R.E. Burger for his gift of the emus.  相似文献   

15.
1.  Interspecific diversity in the visual pigments of stomatopod crustaceans was characterized using microspectrophotometry. We examined the 10 visual pigments in main rhabdoms in retinas of 3 species of each of two genera of stomatopod crustaceans of the superfamily Gonodactyloidea, Gonodactylus (G. oerstedii, G. aloha, and G. curacaoensis) and Odontodactylus (O. scyllarus, O. brevirostris, and O. havanensis). Species were selected to provide a matched diversity of habitats.
2.  In each genus, visual pigments varied in max in several regions of the retina, as revealed by analysis of variance. The variation within closely related species of the same genus implies that visual pigments can evolve rapidly in stomatopods.
3.  In photoreceptors of the peripheral retina, which are devoted to spatial vision, visual pigment max decreased as the depth range of the various species increased, a typical pattern for marine animals. In contrast, visual pigment max in photoreceptors of retinal regions devoted to polarization vision (midband Rows 5 and 6) is not obviously correlated with the spectral environment, implying that polarization information may be confined to particular spectral ranges. Visual pigments of the tiered rows of the midband, which are committed to spectral analysis, span a larger spectral range in shallow-water than deepwater species.
  相似文献   

16.
The endophytic cyanobacterium, Anabaena azollae, isolated from laboratory cultures of Azolla caroliniana Willd., contains three spectroscopically distinct biliproteins. About 70% of the biliprotein is c-phycocyanin (max 610 nm) and 13% is allophycocyanin (max 647 nm, shoulder 620 nm). A third pigment corresponds to phycoerythrocyanin (max 570 nm, shoulder 590 nm). In very dilute solutions of allophycocyanin, at constant pH and buffer strength, the 647 nm maximum disappears and a single max occurs at 615–620 nm. The 647 nm absorption maximum reappears upon concentrating the dilute solution. Very dilute solutions of phycoerythrocyanin exhibit a broad peak between 570 and 590 nm. Absorption spectra of c-phycocyanin are not significantly altered upon dilution. Fluorescence emission maxima of phycoerythrocyanin, c-phycocyanin, and allophycocyanin occur at 630 nm, 643 nm and 660 nm respectively, using 540 nm excitation. Two subunits, of molecular weight 16,500 () and 20,600 (), are seen in c-phycocyanin upon dissociation with SDS. Dissociation of allophycocyanin and phycoerythrocyanin with SDS yields one sizeclass of subunits, with a molecular weight of about 17,500 for allophycocyanin and 18,000 for phycoerythrocyanin.Contribution No. 684 Offprint requests to: G. A. Peters  相似文献   

17.
Summary Scotopic visual pigments measured in the creek chub and the white sucker are porphyropsins with mean max values located at 538.3 and 536.5 nm, respectively. There is a shift of the max towards shorter wavelengths during the winter in both of these species coinciding with similar changes in the quality of downwelling light. max is significantly correlated to the P50 and spectrum width of the downwelling light and dissolved oxygen. An analysis of variance shows that there are significant differences between the max values of: fish in the two lakes, fish at different times, the two species at different times and fish in different lakes at different seasons. The offset visual pigments of both species appear to be well adapted to their photic environment in terms of the contrast hypothesis. This improvement of contrast detection is discussed in relation to their feeding habits.Abbreviations max wavelength at which absorbance is maximum - P50 wavelength which halves the total number of photons between 400 and 700 nm, a measure of spectral quality - PAR photosynthetically active radiation - MSP microspectrophotometric - SE standard error  相似文献   

18.
Summary Increment threshold measurements in wild rabbits give rise to spectral sensitivity curves that are unimodal or bimodal in nature, depending on the background luminance. We propose a model that explains the shape of these curves on the basis of synergistic and antagonistic interaction of blue cones (max = 425 nm), green cones (max = 523 nm) and rods (max = 498 nm).  相似文献   

19.
The spectral sensitivity of 21 eye preparations of Ascalaphus (Libelluloides) macaronius (Insecta, Neuroptera) has been re-measured using an up-to-date spectral scan method. 1. Dorso-frontal and ventro-lateral eyes have different spectral characteristics with peaks of sensitivity at 329 ± 8 nm (n = 15) and 343 ± 4 nm (n = 5) (P = 0.002), respectively. 2. The absorbance of the visual pigment layer, K, determined from the shape of the spectral sensitivity curves is 1.3 ± 1.8(n = 15) for dorso-frontal eyes and – 1.0 ± 0.3(n = 5) for ventrolateral eyes, thus implying higher selfscreening in the dorso-frontal eyes and narrowing of the spectral sensitivity curves as regards to a template visual pigment in ventro-lateral eyes. 3. Plotting K versus spectral sensitivity peak wavelength max revealed an inverse correlation between these variables with K = 42.5 – 0.126 max at r = 0.88(n = 19). 4. Extracts of ommochromes and carotenoids (Figs. 4 to 6) do not allow to account for the above diversity of optical properties of the Ascalaphus eye (Fig. 7).Abbreviations SSC spectral sensitivity curve - DF dorso-frontal eye - UV ultraviolet - VL ventro-lateral eye  相似文献   

20.
The visual pigments and photoreceptor types in the retinas of three species of Pacific salmon (coho, chum, and chinook) were examined using microspectrophotometry and histological sections for light microscopy. All three species had four cone visual pigments with maximum absorbance in the UV (max: 357–382 nm), blue (max: 431–446 nm), green (max: 490–553 nm) and red (max: 548–607 nm) parts of the spectrum, and a rod visual pigment with max: 504–531 nm. The youngest fish (yolk-sac alevins) did not have blue visual pigment, but only UV pigment in the single cones. Older juveniles (smolts) had predominantly single cones with blue visual pigment. Coho and chinook smolts (>1 year old) switched from a vitamin A1- to a vitamin A2-dominated retina during the spring, while the retina of chum smolts and that of the younger alevin-to-parr coho did not. Adult spawners caught during the Fall had vitamin A2-dominated retinas. The central retina of all species had three types of double cones (large, medium and small). The small double cones were situated toward the ventral retina and had lower red visual pigment max than that of medium and large double cones, which were found more dorsally. Temperature affected visual pigment max during smoltification.  相似文献   

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