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1.
Ultrastructure of stemmata (larval eyes), stemmatal nerves, and the optic neuropils of 5th-instar larvae of cotton bollworm, Heliothis armigera (Hübner) (Lepidoptera : Noctuidae), were examined with scanning and transmission electron microscopes. Six stemmata are on each side of the head. Each stemma consists of 7 retinula cells arranged into 2 tiers. Stemmata I and II have 4 distal retinula cells and 3 proximal cells, the other 4 stemmata (III–IV) have 3 distal cells and 4 proximal cells. Stemmata I and IV have a short proximal rhabdom and the rhabdomere of each proximal cell has its microvilli projecting in only one direction. On the other hand, each stemma (in stemmata II–V) has a long proximal rhabdom and the rhabdomere of each proximal cell has microvilli pitched in several different directions relative to the horizontal plane. An axon projects proximally from each retinula cell body. The stemmatal nerve is composed of the 42 retinular axons from all of the 6 stemmata on the same side of the head. Each stemmatal nerve projects to the ipsilateral optic neuropil. Axons from each stemma are in a fasicle (within the stemmatal nerve), which consists of 7 axons, 3–4 of them are thick and terminate synaptically in the proximal neuropil; the others are thinner and terminate in the distal neuropil. Organelles, particularly lysosomes, undergo ultrastructural transformations relative to ambient light levels. The functional significance of abovementioned structures are discussed in light of current knowledge.  相似文献   

2.
Summary The compound eyes of two species of damsel-flies, Ishunura senegalensis and Cersion calamorum, were examined by electron microscopy. Each ommatidium is composed of eight retinula cells which are semistratified in the receptor layer. The retinula cells are divided into four types from the difference of levels in the rhabdom formation; one distal large cell having the rhabdomere only in the distal layer, four middle cells forming the rhabdom in the middle layer, two proximal cells making up the rhabdom in the proximal layer and one distal small cell having no rhabdomere in any layers. In addition, the lamina ganglionaris was partly observed. Some retinula axons terminate at an different level from the other axons. The functional differentiation among these different types of cells is discussed with relation to the analysis of the polarized light and the discrimination of the diffraction images.This work is supported by a grant from the U.S. Army Research and Development Group (Far East), Department of the Army (DA-CRD-AG-S29-544-67-G61).The authors wish to express their gratitude to Drs. H. Morita and H. Tateda for their helpful discussions throughout this study.  相似文献   

3.
Summary The fine structure of an ommatidium of a skipper butterfly, Parnara guttata, has been studied using the electron microscope. Each ommatidium has nine retinula cells, which were classified into three groups: two distal, six medial and one basal retinula cells. The rhabdomeres of the distal retinula cells are localized in the distal part of the rhabdom, while those of the six medial retinula cells appear throughout most of the rhabdom. The rhabdomere of the basal retinula cell occupies only the basal part of the rhabdom. The rhabdomeres of four medial cells are constructed of parallel microvilli, while fan-like microvilli form the rhabdomeres of other two medial retinula cells. The distal and basal retinula cells have rhabdomeres consisting of both parallel and fan-like microvilli. This is the first time the construction of the rhabdomeres of the distal and basal retinula cells has been described in such fine detail for a skipper butterfly. Nine retinula cell axons of each ommatidium extend to the first neuropile of the optic lobe, the lamina ganglionaris. No difference was found in the number of retinula cells of an ommatidium or the shape of the rhabdom between the dorsal and ventral regions of the compound eye.  相似文献   

4.
THE MICROSTRUCTURE OF THE COMPOUND EYES OF INSECTS   总被引:2,自引:5,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
The apposition eyes of two diurnal insects, Sarcophaga bullata (Diptera) and Anax junius (Odonata), have been examined with the electron microscope. In the latter case only the rhabdom is described. The rhabdom of the fly consists of a central matrix and seven rhabdomeres, one for each retinula cell. The rhabdomeres show an ordered internal structure built up of transverse tubes, hexagonal in cross-section. These slender compartments running the width of the rhabdomere are 370 A in diameter. After fixation with osmium tetroxide the walls of the compartments are more electron dense than the interiors. The retinula cells contain mitochondria, and pigment granules smaller than those found in the pigment cells. These granules tend to cluster close behind the membranes which separate the retinula cells from their rhabdomeres. The rhabdom of the dragonfly is a single structure which appears to be composed of three fused "rhabdomeres," each similar to a rhabdomere of Sarcophaga. Reasons are given for believing that the rhabdom may be the site of photoreception, as well as the organ for analyzing plane-polarized light, as suggested by other workers.  相似文献   

5.
Curis caloptera is a buprestid beetle, which is active in bright sunlight. Its eye, like that of many other diurnal arthropods, is of the apposition type, in which dioptric apparatus and receptor layer are not separated by a region devoid of pigment. Perhaps to prevent damage by U. V.-radiation, the cornea is relatively thick (approximately 90 micron) and crystalline cones are of the "eucone-type". In each ommatidium the cone cell extensions occupy regular positions between the 8 retinula cells and reach down to the basement membrane where they end in bulbous swellings and contain grains of screening pigment. Pigment grains, slightly smaller than those present in the primary pigment cells, are also found within the retinula cells. Although the rhabdom possesses a uniform diameter of approximately 2 micron over its entire length of almost 300 micron, the number of rhabdomeres contributing to the rhabdom varies and depends on the level at which the rhabdom is sectioned. At the distal end, only one retinula cell possesses a rhabdomere; the same holds true for the proximal end, where a different rhabdomere (with microvilli at right angles to those of the distal cell) dominates. One retinula cell, of darker appearance in electron micrographs, occupies a distal position in each ommatidium and remains preferentially oriented within a sector of 60 degrees irrespective of the ommatidial axis. The ommatidial axis itself was found to vary 235 degrees. We provide circumstantial evidence for the view that the cell in question could be a U. V.-receptor with a role to play in an unambiguous determination of the E-vector. Separate bundles, each containing 8 axons, pass through the basement membrane together with 1 or 2 tracheoles. A traceheal tapetum is not developed.  相似文献   

6.
Summary The retina of the phalangid, Opilio ravennae, consists of retinula cells with distal rhabdomeres, arhabdomeric cells, and sheath cells. The receptive segment of retinula cells shows a clear separation into a Proximal rhabdom, organized into distinct rhabdom units formed by three or four retinula cells, and a Distal rhabdom, consisting of an uniterrupted layer of contiguous rhabdomeres. One of the cells comprising a retinula unit, the so-called distal retinula cell (DRC), has two or three branches that pass laterally alongside the rhabdom, thereby separating the two or three principal retinula cells of a unit. The two morphologically distinct layers of the receptive segment differ with respect to the cellular origin of rhabdomeral microvilli: DRC-branches contribute very few microvilli to the proximal rhabdom and develop extremely large rhabdomeres in the distal rhabdom only, causing the rhabdom units to fuse. Principal retinula cells, on the other hand, comprise the majority of microvilli of the proximal rhabdom, but their rhabdomeres diminish in the distal rhabdom. It is argued that proximal and distal rhabdoms serve different functions in relation to the intensity of incident light.In animals fixed 4 h after sunset, pigment granules retreat from the distal two thirds of the receptive segment. A comparison of retinae of day- and night-adapted animals shows that there is a slight (approximately 15%) increase in the cross-sectional area of rhabdomeral microvilli in dark-adapted animals, which in volume corresponds to the loss of pigment granules from the receptive segment. The length of the receptive segment as well as the pattern and shape of rhabdom units, however, remain unchanged.Each retinula unit is associated with one arhabdomeric cell. Their cell bodies are located close to those of retinula cells, but are much smaller and do not contain pigment granules. The most remarkable feature is a long, slender distal dendrite that extends up to the base of the fused rhabdom where it increases in diameter and develops a number of lateral processes interdigitating with microvilli of the rhabdom. The most distal dendrite portion extends through the center of the fused rhabdom and has again a smooth outline. All dendrites end in the distal third of the proximal rhabdom and are never present in the layer of the contiguous distal rhabdom. Arhabdomeric cells are of essentially the same morphology in day- and night-adapted animals. They are interpreted as photoinsensitive secondary neurons involved in visual information-processing that channel current collected from retinula cells of the proximal rhabdom along the optic nerve. A comparison is made with morphological equivalents of these cells in other chelicerate species.  相似文献   

7.
Retinal fine structure and optics of the eye of the dung beetle Euoniticellus africanus have been studied and compared with those of three other scarabaeid beetles: Repsimus manicatus, Anoplognathus pallidicollis and Sericesthis geminata. The eye of Euoniticellus, in common with that of the other three species, possesses a dioptric system in which light first passes through a thick optically homogeneous cornea, and then enters a non-homogeneous crystalline cone. The lens cylinder properties of the latter cause the light rays to become partially focused across the clear-zone upon the rhabdom layer. Rays traced through a large scale drawing of the eye, with refractive indices measured for each component, predict an acceptance angle of approximately 26°. Since no significant aperture changes, lengthening of crystalline thread, cell or pigment migrations appear to be associated with dark/light adaptation, the eye may be assumed to be permanently poorly focused. In optomotor experiments the beetles did not show their characteristic antennal following response to black and white stripes when the latter had repeat periods of <30°. Structurally the eye of Euoniticellus differs markedly from that of other scarabaeids. It is totally divided into dorsal and ventral eye which are of a different size (the dorsal eye is smaller), but whose structural organization is basically the same. Principal pigment cells (they do not fully surround the cone) as well as accessory pigment cells (they accompany the retinula cells in an extraordinarily regular fashion as far as to the basement membrane) exhibit some unusual features. On the proximal side of the clear-zone, at a level where all retinula cell membranes form complex meanders and convolutions, cell 1 is the first to possess a rhabdomere. In it, all microvilli run parallel. This rhabdomere becomes part of the rectangular proximal rhabdom over the upper 20% of its length. Below this level the rhabdom consists of 6 rhabdomeres, but throughout its length microvilli are oriented in 2 orthogonal directions. It is thought that polarization sensitivity in dung beetles generally is related to the rhabdom organization described for Euoniticellus. An eighth (basal) cell is present in each ommatidium, but it lacks a rhabdomere. A tracheal tapetum is not developed. Finally, the point is made not to regard all different eye structures in insects as perfect adaptations to a particular environment or way of living, for specializations of photoreceptors may either follow, parallel or precede any ecological adaptation.  相似文献   

8.
Summary Retinular fine structure has been compared in the superposition compound eyes of three sphingid moths, one nocturnal, Cechenena, and two diurnal, Cephonodes and Macroglossum. Cechenena and Cephonodes have tiered retinas with three kinds of retinular cells: two distal, six regular and one basal. The distal retinular cells in Cechenena are special in having a complex partially intracellular rhabdomere not present in Cephonodes. Macroglossum lacks the distal retinular cell. In Cephonodes a unique rhabdom type, formed by the six regular retinular cells in the middle region of the retinula, is divided into three separate longitudinal plates arranged closely parallel to one another. Their constituent microvilli are consequently all nearly unidirectional. The ratio of rhabdom volume to retinular cell volume in the two diurnal sphingids is 10–27%; this is about the same as that (25%) of skipper butterflies, but significantly smaller than in the nocturnal Cechenena (60%). In the diurnal sphingids retinular cell membranes show elongate meandering profiles with septate junctions between adjacent retinular cells. From the comparative fine structure of their eyes the diurnal sphingids and the skippers would appear to be phylogenetically closely related.Supported in part by grants from Ministry of Education Japan (Special Project Research in Animal Behaviors)  相似文献   

9.
Ultrastructure of the eye of a euphausiid crustacean   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The compound eye of the Antarctic euphausiid Euphausia superba is a spherical clear zone eye. The dioptric system consists of a hexagonally-faceted cornea, two corneagenous cells, two crystalline cone cells which form the bipartite crystalline cone, and two accessory cone cells. The dioptric system of each ommatidium is separated from that of adjacent ommatidia by six distal pigment cells and a basement membrane. The proximal tip of the crystalline cone is cupped by the distal ends of the seven retinula cells whose nuclei are arranged in a staggered array slightly distal to the middle of the clear zone. In the distal half of the clear zone, each narrow retinula cell column is surrounded by large proximal extensions of the six distal pigment cells. The pigment cells narrow more proximally and terminate at the proximal basement membrane. A specialized axial channel complex extends from the crystalline cone through the clear zone, and is continuous with a conical refractive element which caps the distal end of the rhabdom. The rhabdom is fused, and made up of alternating highly birefringent layers of orthogonally-oriented microvilli. It is surrounded by a narrow extra-cellular space which is continuous with the distal refractive element and a second conical refractive element at the proximal end of the rhabdom.  相似文献   

10.
The galatheid squat lobster, Munida rugosa, has compound eyes of the reflecting superposition type in which a distal cone cell layer and a proximal rhabdom layer are separated by an extensive clear zone. The eye is shown to have certain unique features. In all other reflecting superposition eyes, the clear zone is traversed by crystalline tracts formed by the cone cells. In M. rugosa a thin distal rhabdom thread, formed by the eighth retinula cell, connects the cones to the proximal fusiform rhabdoms. The cytoplasm of the other retinula cells also crosses the clear zone in a complex pattern. Fully light-adapted ommatidia are optically isolated by limited migrations of distal shielding pigments. A reflecting pigment multilayer lines each cone to facilitate the formation of a superposition image. This also shows a light-induced change which may limit the acceptance angle of the eye during light adaptation.  相似文献   

11.
The lateral ocelli of Scolopendra cingulata and Scolopendra oraniensis were examined by electron microscopy. A pigmented ocellar field with four eyes arranged in a rhomboid configuration is present frontolaterally on both sides of the head. Each lateral ocellus is cup-shaped and consists of a deeply set biconvex corneal lens, which is formed by 230–2,240 cornea-secreting epithelial cells. A crystalline cone is not developed. Two kinds of photoreceptive cells are present in the retinula. 561–1,026 cylindrical retinula cells with circumapically developed microvilli form a large distal rhabdom. Arranged in 13–18 horizontal rings, the distal retinula cells display a multilayered appearance. Each cell layer forms an axial ring of maximally 75 rhabdomeres. In addition, 71–127 club-shaped proximal retinula cells make up uni- or bidirectional rhabdomeres, whose microvilli interdigitate. 150–250 sheath cells are located at the periphery of the eye. Radial sheath cell processes encompass the soma of all retinula cells. Outside the eye cup there are several thin layers of external pigment cells, which not only ensheath the ocelli but also underlie the entire ocellar field, causing its darkly pigmented. The cornea-secreting epithelial cells, sheath cells and external pigment cells form a part of the basal matrix extending around the entire eye cup. Scolopendromorph lateral ocelli differ remarkably with respect to the eyes of other chilopods. The dual type retinula in scolopendromorph eyes supports the hypothesis of its homology with scutigeromorph ommatidia. Other features (e.g. cup-shaped profile of the eye, horizontally multilayered distal retinula cells, interdigitating proximal rhabdomeres, lack of a crystalline cone, presence of external pigment and sheath cells enveloping the entire retinula) do not have any equivalents in scutigeromorph ommatidia and would, therefore, not directly support homology. In fact, most of them (except the external pigment cells) might be interpreted as autapomorphies defining the Pleurostigmophora. Certain structures (e.g. sheath cells, interdigitating proximal rhabdomeres, discontinuous layer of cornea-secreting epithelial cells) are similar to those found in some lithobiid ocelli (e.g. Lithobius). The external pigment cells in Scolopendra species, however, must presently be regarded as an autapomorphy of the Scolopendromorpha.  相似文献   

12.
Ommatidia of the eucon compound eye of Adoxophyes reticulana (Lepidoptera : Tortricidae) were investigated elect ronmicroscopically. The dorsofrontal part and the dorsal rim region were examined in serial sections. Seven radially arranged retinula cells RC1−7 form the rhabdom from distal to proximal region (Fig. 1). The 8th retinula cell RC8 joins the first 7 at their bases; this cell enlarges proximally (Fig. 1C, D). In the dorsofrontal region, 2 types of rhabdoms are distinguished; Type II (Figs. 1B2;3b) outnumbers Type I (Figs. 1B1;3a by a ratio of 4 : l. In the dorsal rim area, the first 2 rows are occupied exclusively by Type 11-rhabdoms; beyond this, the rhabdom of the dorsal rim area is characterized by the fact that its middle and proximal parts are considerably larger in diameter than in the dorsofrontal part; in this region, the microvilli of the horizontally oriented rhabdomeres are also parallel to the ;,-axis of the eye (Figs. 1B3;3d). Thus, this small eye region meets the structural requirements for the detection of polarized light. The eye is interpreted as an intermediate between apposition and superposition eyes, because the rhabdom begins at the tip of the crystalline tract and the retinula cells are pigmented like those of an apposition eye. On the other hand, the structure of the dioptric apparatus and the tracheal system corresponds to those of superposition eyes. Parallels with the Ephestia eye in basic structural features are discussed in regard to the possible function of this eye and to the systematic position of A. reticulana.  相似文献   

13.
Summary The ultrastructural organization of ommatidial components of the retina of the moth, Galleria mellonella are described from electron microscopic observations. Each ommatidium is composed of 12 common retinula cells and one basal eccentric cell. The retinula cells are connected together by a desmosomal strip along their length. The rhabdom occupies the basal thirty percent of the ommatidium and can be divided into nine segments of parallel microvilli. Several cells may contribute to an individual rhabdomere. The rhabdomeres are arranged in a cross with single cell rhabdomeres lying between the arms of the cross. Thin sections of ommatidium absorb polarized light differentially. The total amount of plane polarized light absorbed varies with angle of rotation for an entire ommatidium but there are also differences between the amount of absorption of adjacent rhabdomeric segments. Galleria appears to be the only lepidopteran in which the possibility of the polarized light reception has been reported.  相似文献   

14.
Abstract The ommatidia of the compound eyes of Artemia salina L. are normally composed of four crystalline cone cells containing glycogen. The cells are enveloped by two so-called “cellules épidermiques juxta-cristallines”. There are also six pigmented retinula cells, all contributing to the rhabdom. A peculiar feature of the Artemia crystalline cone cells is that their elongated parts, the so-called cone cell roots, widen and flatten proximally, forming interdigitating “endfeet”. The basement membrane thus consists of a cellular portion combined with the basal lamina. The main mass of the rhabdom of the Artemia eye is built up by five retinula cells, two contributing a smaller part. The microvilli are oriented in four directions, two being orthogonal. The sixth cell contributes on two small portions to the rhabdom in the distalmost and a more proximal position. The rest of it runs axon-like outside the omnatidium. Where the sixth cell wedges in, the direction of the microvilli is changed and has no orthogonal pattern. Two rhabdom types of compound eyes are distinguished: the decapod or banded or layered rhabdom: and the anostracan rhabdom with continuous rhabdomeres.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Based on reconstructions from serial thin sections, arhabdomeric cells within the retina of the median eyes of the scorpion,Androctonus australis, are identified. Each retinula unit (formed by mainly five retinula cells with a fused rhabdom) is associated with one arhabdomeric cell. Extending distally from its soma which is located close to the postretina, the arhabdomeric cell bears an up to 80 m long dendrite that ends at the base of the fused rhabdom. The most noteworthy morphological feature of the dendrite is the presence, at the distal dendrite tip, of numerous finger-like or bulbous evaginations that extend into every one of the five visual cells forming a retinula unit. These and other characteristics strongly suggest that the arhabdomeric cell represents an intrinsically photoinsensitive second neuron involved in visual information processing.This study was supportet by a grant from the Deutsche Forschungs-gemeinschaft (F1 77/8).  相似文献   

16.
The evolutionary origin of holometabolous larvae is a long‐standing and controversial issue. The Mecoptera are unique in Holometabola for their larvae possessing a pair of compound eyes instead of stemmata. The ultrastructure of the larval eyes of the scorpionfly Panorpa dubia Chou and Wang, 1981 was investigated using transmission electron microscopy. Each ommatidium possesses a cornea, a tetrapartite eucone crystalline cone, eight retinula cells, two primary pigment cells, and an undetermined number of secondary pigment cells. The rhabdomeres of the eight retinula cells form a centrally‐fused, tiered rhabdom of four distal and four proximal retinula cells. The rhabdomeres of the four distal retinula cells extend distally into a funnel shape around the basal surface of the crystalline cone. Based on the similarity of the larval eyes of Panorpidae to the eyes of the hemimetabolous insects and the difference from the stemmata of the holometabolous larvae, the evolutionary origin of the holometabolous larvae is briefly discussed. Morphol., 2012. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

17.
The lateral lens eye of adult Craterostigmus tasmanianus Pocock, 1902 (a centipede from Australia and New Zealand) was examined by light and electron microscopy. An elliptical, bipartite eye is located frontolaterally on either side of the head. The nearly circular posterior part of the eye is characterized by a plano-convex cornea, whereas no corneal elevation is visible in the crescentic anterior part. The so-called lateral ocellus appears cup-shaped in longitudinal section and includes a flattened corneal lens comprising a homogeneous and pigmentless epithelium of cornea-secreting cells. The retinula consists of two kinds of photoreceptive cells. The distribution of the distal retinula cells is highly irregular. Variable numbers of cells are grouped together in multilayered, thread-like unions extending from the ventral and dorsal margins into the center of the eye. Around their knob-like or bilobed apices the distal retinula cells give rise to fused polymorphic rhabdomeres. Both everse and inverse cells occur in the distal retinula. Smaller, club-shaped proximal retinula cells are present in the second (limited to the peripheral region) and proximal third of the eye, where they are arranged in dual cell units. In its apical region each unit produces a small, unidirectional rhabdom of interdigitating microvilli. All retinula cells are surrounded by numerous sheath cells. A thin basal lamina covers the whole eye cup, which, together with the distal part of the optic nerve, is wrapped by external pigment cells filled with granules of varying osmiophily. The eye of C. tasmanianus seemingly displays very high complexity compared to many other hitherto studied euarthropod eyes. Besides the complex arrangement of the entire retinula, the presence of a bipartite eye cup, intraocellar exocrine glands, inverse retinula cells, distal retinula cells with bilobed apices, separated pairs of proximal retinula cells, medio-retinal axon bundles, and the formation of a vertically partitioned, antler-like distal rhabdom represent apomorphies of the craterostigmomorph eye. These characters therefore collectively underline the separate position of the Craterostigmomorpha among pleurostigmophoran centipedes. The remaining retinal features of C. tasmanianus agree with those known from other chilopod eyes and, thus, may be considered plesiomorphies. Characters like the unicorneal eye cup, sheath cells, and proximal rhabdomeres with interdigitating microvilli were already present in the ground pattern of the Pleurostigmophora. Other retinal features were developed in the ancestral lineage of the Phylactometria (e.g., large elliptical eyes, external pigment cells, polygonal sculpturations on the corneal surface). The homology of all chilopod eyes (including Notostigmophora) is based principally on the possession of a dual type retinula.  相似文献   

18.
The lateral compound eye of Scutigera coleoptrata was examined by electron microscopy. Each ommatidium consists of a dioptric apparatus, formed by a cornea and a multipartite eucone crystalline cone, a bilayered retinula and a surrounding sheath of primary pigment and interommatidial pigment cells. With reference to the median eye region, each cone is made up of eight cone segments belonging to four cone cells. The nuclei of the cone cells are located proximally outside the cone near the transition area between distal and proximal retinula cells. The connection between nuclear region and cone segment is via a narrow cytoplasmic strand, which splits into two distal cytoplasmic processes. Additionally, from the nuclear region of each cone cell a single cytoplasmic process runs in a proximal direction to the basement membrane. The bilayered rhabdom is usually made up of the rhabdomeres of 9–12 distal retinula cells and four proximal retinula cell. The pigment shield is composed of primary pigment cells (which most likely secrete the corneal lens) and interommatidial pigment cells. The primary pigment cells underlie the cornea and surround, more or less, the upper third of the crystalline cone. By giving rise to the cornea and by functioning as part of the pigment shield these pigment cells serve a double function. Interommatidial pigment cells extend from the cornea to the basement membrane and stabilise the ommatidium. In particular, the presence of cone cells, primary pigment cells as well as interommatidial pigment cells in the compound eye of S. coleoptrata is seen as an important morphological support for the Mandibulata concept. Furthermore, the phylogenetic significance of these cell types is discussed with respect to the Tetraconata.  相似文献   

19.
Summary Light and dark adaptations were studied in the eye of Squilla mantis. Light adaptation is characterized by (1) a proximal shift of the distal pigment sheath (DPS) surrounding the proximal portion of the crystalline cone above its zone of contact with the rhabdom; (2) flattening of the distal pigment sheath; (3) lengthening of the crystalline cone correlated with shortening of the rhabdom; (4) a migration of screening pigment granules in retinula cells in the protoplasmic bridges crossing the perirhabdomal space. In animals kept in constant darkness, longitudinal displacements of the distal pigment sheath were found to be subject to a circadian rhythm characterized by a maximal light adaptation state at about 5 p.m. and a minimal one at 5 a.m. Screening pigment granule translocation in retinula cells does not show such rhythmic activity.Abbreviations a, b maximal incidence angles in L.A., and D.A., respectively - Cc crystalline cone - Dps distal pigment sheath - I extreme incident light beam - Prs perirhabdomal space - Rh rhabdom - Rp reflecting pigment This research has been supported by grant 3.012-76 of the Swiss National Science Foundation  相似文献   

20.
Horridge GA 《Tissue & cell》1969,1(3):425-442
The eye of Dytiscus (Coleoptera) has rhabdomeres at three different levels. The crystalline threads stretch from the ends of the crystalline cones only as far as the distal layer of rhabdomeres. There is one distal rhabdo-mere per ommatidium, and in this system the ommatidia are anatomically separate. Between the distal rhabdomere and the rhabdomeres of the next six retinula cells is a wide clear zone in which light entering by one facet could possibly reach deep rhabdomeres of a different ommatidium. Of the six proximal rhabdomeres, four have rhabdomere tubules which lie horizontal with reference to the normal posture, the other two having vertically oriented tubules. The eighth cell, with nucleus near the basement membrane, has a small rhabdomere. All eight retinula cells have axons and there is no other class of axons in the eye.  相似文献   

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