Receptive field of the stemmata in the swallowtail butterflyPapilio |
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Authors: | Toshio Ichikawa Hideki Tateda |
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Institution: | (1) Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, Kyushu University, 812 Fukuoka, Japan |
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Abstract: | Summary Receptive fields of individual retinular cells in the stemmata ofPapilio xuthus L. were examined electrophysiologically, and the receptive field of the complete stemmatal system was reconstructed (Fig. 8).In stemmata I-IV, proximal retinular cells have narrow receptive fields (acceptance angles of = 1.7–5 °, Fig. 5) and small inclinations of the visual axes (inclinations of = 0.7–1.5 °, Fig. 2) with respect to the axis of the stemma, while distal ones have wide fields ( =7–13 °, Fig. 5) and large inclinations of the visual axes ( = 5–10 °, Fig. 3). In stemmata V and VI, both proximal and distal retinular cells have wide receptive fields ( = 7–26 °, Fig. 6) and have large inclinations of their visual axes ( = 9–19 °) with respect to the axis of the stemma except for one proximal cell ( = 0 °) (Fig. 4).The spatial properties of distal and proximal retinular cells, combined with the finding that distal cells are homogeneous in the spectral sensitivity while proximal ones are heterogeneous (Ichikawa and Tateda 1980), suggest that the distal cells may be concerned largely with the detection of objects and proximal cells are involved with the discrimination of the color and shape of the detected objects. |
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