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Optic lobes of the larval and imaginal scorpionfly Panorpa vulgaris (Mecoptera,Panorpidae): A neuroanatomical study of neuropil organization,retinula axons,and lamina monopolar cells
Authors:Roland R Melzer
Institution:(1) Institut für Biologie I (Zoologie) der Universität, Albertstrasse 21a, D-79104 Freiburg, Germany;(2) Present address: Zoologisches Institut der Universität München, Luisenstrasse 14, D-80333 München, Germany
Abstract:Panorpa larvae possess stemmata (lateral ocelli), which have the structure of compound eyes, and stemma lamina and stemma medulla neuropils. A distinct lobula neuropil is lacking. The stemma neuropils have a columnar organization. They contain lamina monopolar cells, and both short and long visual fibers. All the identified larval monopolar neurons have radially arranged dendrites along the entire depth of the lamina neuropil and a single terminal arborization within the medulla (L1/L2-type). The terminals of visual fibers have short spiny lateral projections. Long fibers possess en passant synapses within the lamina. The same principles of organization of first and second order visual neuropils are found in Panorpa imagines. In contrast to the larvae, a lobula neuropil is present. Adults have monopolar cells of the L1-type that are similar to the L1-neurons found in Diptera. The columnar organization, the presence of short and long visual fibers, and lamina monopolar neurons are thus features common to both visual systems, viz., the larval (stemmata) and the imaginal (compound eyes).
Keywords:Visual system  Optic lobe  Stemmata  Compound eye  Neuropil  Panorpa vulgaris (Insecta)
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