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1.
Summary The crustaceanDaphnia magna responds to a flash of light with a ventral rotation of its compound eye; this behavior is termed eye flick. We determined the spectral sensitivity for the threshold of eye flick in response to light flashes having three different spatial characteristics: (1) full-field, extending 180° from dorsal to ventral in the animal's field of view; (2) dorsal, 30° wide and located in the dorsal region of the visual field; (3) ventral, same as dorsal but located ventrally. All three stimuli extended 30° to the right and to the left of the animal's midplane. We found that spectral sensitivity varies with the spatial characteristics of the stimulus. For full-field illumination, the relative sensitivity was maximal at 527 nm and between 365 nm and 400 nm, with a significant local minimum at 420 nm. For the dorsal stimulus, the relative sensitivity was greatest at 400 nm, but also showed local maxima at 440 nm and 517 nm. For the ventral stimulus, the relative sensitivity maxima occurred at the same wavelengths as those for the full-field stimulus. At wavelengths of 570 nm and longer, the responses to both dorsal and ventral stimuli showed lower relative sensitivity than the full-field stimulus. No circadian or other periodic changes in threshold spectral sensitivity were observed under our experimental conditions. Animals which had their nauplius eyes removed by means of laser microsurgery had the same spectral sensitivity to full-field illumination as normal animals. Our results are discussed in terms of our current knowledge of the spectral classes of photoreceptors found in theDaphnia compound eye.  相似文献   

2.
Four spectral classes of cone in the retinas of birds   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Summary The spectral sensitivity of 15 species of birds has been measured by recording transretinal voltages from opened eyecups. With suitable combinations of colored adapting lights, we find that a variety of passerines have four peaks of photopic sensitivity, with maxima at 370, 450, 480, and 570 nm. Additional sensitivity maxima at 510 nm are found in some species. The spectral sensitivity functions are not altered by bathing the retinas in 50 mM sodium aspartate, suggesting that they reflect the properties of cones and do not result from inhibitory interactions between retinal interneurons.Comparison of the results with a general mathematical model that describes spectral sensitivity functions recorded extracellularly from populations of receptors in different states of adaptation (Goldsmith 1986) shows that the retinal spectral sensitivity functions are consistent with the presence of (at least) four types of cone, but indicate as well that many of the cones that are maximally sensitive in the blue and violet likely contain oil droplets that attenuate the deep violet and near uv.  相似文献   

3.
Spectral responses from the compound eyes of 35 lepidopteran species representing 14 families were investigated electrophysiologically using ERG recordings. The light-stimuli used overed the range of 383–700 nm wavelengths. All species show three or four maxima in their spectral sensitivity curves. Two of these peaks were usually associated with ultraviolet and blue light (383 and 460 nm, respectively). The other maxima occurred in the 500–620 nm region. In Nymphalidae the highest peak was found in response to 560–580 nm stimuli. Of all wavelengths tested, these are the longest wavelengths to produce principal peak sensitivities.Pieridae and Lycaenidae have maxima in the UV region which represent significantly higher sensitivities than the secondary peaks to stimuli of longer wavelengths.Satyridae, Danaidae, Hesperiidae and diurnal moths except Epicopeia (Epicopeidae) generally have similar sensitivity curves with principal peaks between 500 and 520 nm.In Papilionid species except Graphium (max = 560 nm) high maxima occur in the UV and blue (460 nm) region.Noctural Sphingid moths possess the highest peak sensitivity at 540 nm. All other noctural moths tested have three or four maxima.  相似文献   

4.
The spectral sensitivities of 12 species of mesopelagic crustaceans were studied by means of electrophysiological recordings. Nine of the species are vertical migrators, while 3 are not, and 9 species possess bioluminescent organs, while 3 are not bioluminescent. All species had a single peak of spectral sensitivity with maxima between 470 nm and 500 nm. There was no apparent correlation between sensitivity maxima and daytime depth distribution, migratory behavior, or the presence or absence of bioluminescent organs. With the exception of the hyperiid amphipod Phronima sedentaria, the spectral sensitivities of these mesopelagic crustaceans demonstrate a better match for maximum sensitivity to bioluminescence than to downwelling light. Accepted: 29 June 1999  相似文献   

5.
Summary Electroretinograms obtained in the butterfliesAglais urticae andPieris brassicae by the procedure of Fourier interferometric stimulation (FIS) were used to construct spectral sensitivity curves. These curves, representing the combined responses of several receptor types, were approximated by summation of spectral sensitivity curves for individual pigments, and the presence of these pigments was corroborated by chromatic adaptation experiments. The results show that the retina in the compound eye ofAglais urticae contains 3 photopigments, with maximal absorption at ca. 360 nm, 460 nm and 530 nm, respectively (Fig. 5). The retina in the compound eye ofPieris brassicae has two subdivisions. In the dorsal region of the eye 3 photopigments were found, with maxima at ca. 360 nm, 450 nm and 560 nm (Fig. 8). In the medioventral region pigments with essentially the same maxima are present together with an additional, fourth long-wavelength component with effective maximal absorption at ca. 620 nm (Fig. 11). Its absorption curve is considerably narrower than would be expected for a rhodopsin with the same absorption maximum, and presumably results from the spectral combination of a photopigment and a photostable screening pigment.Abbreviations FIS Fourier interferometric stimulation - WLP White-light position - ERG Electroretinogram  相似文献   

6.
Summary The spectral sensitivity (wavelength region 330 to 650 nm) of single photoreceptor cells in the compound eye of the butterfly Heliconius numata (Lepidoptera) was studied by intracellular recording. The configuration and amplitude of the receptor potential was similar to that reported for other insect photoreceptor cells. Maximal sensitivity was found in one of the following wavelength regions: 390 to 410 nm, 450 to 470 nm and 530 to 550 nm. Side maxima of variable amplitude were found. The results suggest three photoreceptor types with different spectral sensitivity maxima.  相似文献   

7.
Summary This study reports photopic spectral sensitivity curves (351–709 nm) for four individual roach,Rutilus rutilus, determined by two choice appetitive training. All four curves show four sensitivity maxima at 361–398 nm, 421–448 nm, 501–544 nm and 634–666 nm which are related to the four known roach photopic visual pigments (Avery et al. 1982). The overall shape of the curves at long wavelengths indicates inhibitory interactions between the red and green cone mechanisms. That the high behavioural sensitivity in the UV is caused by a specific ultraviolet visual pigment and is not due to aberrant stimulation of the other cone types is shown by the redetermination of spectral sensitivity at short wavelengths (351–501 nm) following the selective bleaching of the three longer wavelength visual pigments. This depresses the blue sensitivity to a greater degree than the relatively unaffected UV sensitivity maximum. Spectral transmission data from two corneas and four lenses show that they transmit considerable amounts of light in the near UV.  相似文献   

8.
Eye spectral sensitivity, [S(lambda)], was measured in seven northern Baltic mysid species using an electroretinogram technique. Their S(lambda) curves were compared with the spectral distribution of underwater light at their normal habitats. In the littoral species Neomysis integer, Praunus flexuosus and Praunus inermis, the S(lambda) maxima, [S(lambda)(max)], were in the wavelength-bands of 525-535, 505-515 and 520-530 nm respectively. The neoimmigrant species Hemimysis anomala had a S(lambda)(max) around 500 nm and high sensitivity at 393 nm, possibly indicating UV-sensitivity. S(lambda) of the pelagic species Mysis mixta and Mysis relicta sp. II was at about 505-520 nm. M. relicta sp. I from Pojoviken Bay and fresh water humic Lake P??j?rvi had S(lambda)(max) at approximately 550 nm and 570 nm respectively. This is in accordance with a similar long-wavelength shift in light transmittance of the respective waters. The eyes of the latter population were also damaged by strong light. The pontocaspian neoimmigrant H. anomala is clearly adapted to waters transmitting more blue light.  相似文献   

9.
Retinal visual and screening pigments of two populations (one marine and the other freshwater) of the opossum shrimp Mysis relicta Lovén (Crustacea, Mysidacea), which have different ocular tolerance to light, was investigated. Visual pigments were extracted by detergent and their bleaching difference spectra were determined. The difference between the visual pigment absorption maximum of the two populations correlated with their difference in spectral sensitivity. Using buffer or neutral methanol, a yellow pigment was extracted which had absorption maxima at 440 nm and 325 nm and bright blue fluorescence (λmax 415 nm). A screening pigment (ommochrome) with maximum at 525 nm was extracted by acid methanol, and was probably related to the group of ommines. The eyes of the lake population had 1.8–2.7 times less of this pigment than the eyes of the sea population. The sea population is more resistant to photo-induced accumulation of thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances in eye tissues. This resistance may be due to the higher ommochrome content. Accepted: 8 December 1998  相似文献   

10.
Elofsson  R.  Falck  B.  Lindvall  O.  Myhrberg  H. 《Cell and tissue research》1977,182(4):525-536
Summary In certain sensory neurons of many different invertebrate species, including the sea anemones. Metridium senile and Tealia felina and the crustacean Anemia salina, fluorophores are formed during the course of the fluorescent histochemical technique of Falck-Hillarp. The presumed catecholamine nature of the neuronal fluorogenic compound was investigated by microspectrofluorometry, and the spectral characteristics of the fluorescence in the taxonomically different species was found to be very similar (excitation maximum at 375 nm with a smaller peak or shoulder at 330 nm and sometimes a shoulder in the spectrum at 410 nm; emission maximum at 475 nm). The emission maximum coincides with that of the catecholamines and DOPA (475 nm). The excitation maximum (375 nm) directly after formaldehyde treatment, however, differs from that of the catecholamines and DOPA (410 nm), but is similar to the excitation maximum displayed by these catechol derivatives at acid pH. The spectral characteristics of the fluorophore in the sensory cells might therefore theoretically be explained by an acid pH in the cells. This seems improbable, however, and it is suggested that the phenomenon is due to the presence of unknown catechol derivatives. Analyses of the pH-dependent spectral changes indicate that the presumed catechol derivative in Tealia felina is -hydroxylated, whereas that in Anemia salina is not.  相似文献   

11.
Non-physical barriers, including the use of underwater strobe lights alone or paired with sound or bubbles, are being considered as a means to prevent the upstream migration of invasive silver carp Hypophthalmichthys molitrix and bighead carp H. nobilis. To optimize potential optical deterrents, it is necessary to understand the visual sensitivity of the fishes. Dark-adapted H. molitrix and H. nobilis were found to possess broad visual sensitivity between 470 to 620 nm with peak spectral sensitivity at 540 nm for H. molitrix and 560 nm in H. nobilis. To assess the effect of a strobe light on vision, dark-adapted H. molitrix, H. nobilis and common carp Cyprinus carpio, were exposed to three different 5 s trains (100, 200, or 500 ms on–off flashes) of white light and the recovery of visual sensitivity was determined by measuring the b-wave amplitude of the electroretinogram (ERG). For all species, the longest recoveries were observed in response to the 500 ms flash trains (H. molitrix mean ± SE = 702.0 ± 89.8 s; H. nobilis 648.0 ± 116.0 s; C. carpio 480 ± 180.0 s). The results suggest that strobe lights can temporarily depress visual sensitivity, which may render optical barriers less effective.  相似文献   

12.
The difference absorption spectra of hen and turkey lysozymes in the alkaline pH region had three maxima at around 245, 292, and 300 nm and had no isosbestic points. The ratio of the extinction difference at 245 nm to that at 295 nm changed with pH. These spectral features are quite different from those observed when only tyrosyl residues are ionized, and it was impossible to determine precisely the pK values of the tyrosyl residues in lysozyme by spectrophotometric titration. A time-dependent spectral change was observed above about pH 12. This is not due to exposure of a buried tyrosyl residue on alkali denaturation. The disulfide bonds and the peptide bonds in the lysozyme molecule were cleaved by alkali above about pH 11. The intrinsic pK value of Tyr 23 of hen lysozyme was determined to be 10.24 (apparent pK 9.8) at 0.1 ionic strength and 25 degrees C from the CD titration data. Comparison of the CD titration of turkey lysozyme with that of hen lysozyme suggested that Tyr 3 and Tyr 23 in turkey lysozyme have apparent pK values of 11.9 and 9.8, respectively.  相似文献   

13.
Visual pigments, oil droplets and photoreceptor types in the retinas of four species of true chameleons have been examined by microspectrophotometry. The species occupy different photic environments: two species of Chamaeleo are from Madagascar and two species of Furcifer are from Africa and the Arabian Peninsula. In addition to double cones, four spectrally distinct classes of single cone were identified. No rod photoreceptors were observed. The visual pigments appear to be mixtures of rhodopsins and porphyropsins. Double cones contained a pale oil droplet in the principle member and both outer segments contained a long-wave-sensitive visual pigment with a spectral maximum between about 555 nm and 610 nm, depending on the rhodopsin/porphyropsin mixture. Long-wave-sensitive single cones contained a visual pigment spectrally identical to the double cones, but combined with a yellow oil droplet. The other three classes of single cone contained visual pigments with maxima at about 480–505, 440–450 and 375–385 nm, combined with yellow, clear and transparent oil droplets respectively. The latter two classes were sparsely distributed. The transmission of the lens and cornea of C. dilepis was measured and found to be transparent throughout the visible and near ultraviolet, with a cut off at about 350 nm.  相似文献   

14.
Electroretinographic recordings were made from hatchling loggerhead and leatherback sea turtle eyecup preparations to generate dark-adapted spectral sensitivity curves. Both species were maximally sensitive to wavelengths between 500 and 540 nm, with a secondary peak near 380 nm. The spectral sensitivity curve for leatherbacks was attenuated at the long wavelength end of the spectrum relative to that of the loggerheads. This difference may reflect adaptations to lighting available at the relatively shallow (loggerhead) versus deeper (leatherback) sites where each species forages. The broad spectrum of wavelengths detected by both species (near UV to yellow–orange) indicates that vision is likely mediated by more than one photopigment, potentially rendering these turtles capable of color vision.  相似文献   

15.
Summary An action spectrum of light induced coremia-zonation was obtained for the fungus Penicillium claviforme mut. olivicolor Abe et Ura. Zonation is induced only by light of wavelengths shorter than 510 nm. The action spectrum has maxima at 370 nm and at 450–460 nm and a definite shoulder at 470–480 nm. Penicillium claviforme mut. album is somewhat less sensitive to light but possesses the same spectral sensitivity.Measurable amounts of carotenoids are not found in the mycelium. The presence of diphenylamine in the nutrition medium has no effect on the fungal sensitivity to light. It is therefore assumed that the photoreceptor pigment involved is a flavoprotein.

Die Arbeit wurde während eines Studienaufenthaltes im Zentralinstitut für Genetik und Kulturpflanzenforschung der Deutschen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Berlin in Gatersleben angefertigt.  相似文献   

16.
Spectral sensitivity functions were measured between 334 nm and 683 nm in Salamandra salamandra by utilizing two behavioral reactions: the negative phototactic response, and the prey catching behavior elicited by a moving worm dummy. The action spectrum of the negative phototactic response revealed 3 pronounced maxima: at 360–400 nm, at 520–540 nm, and at 600–640 nm. In the range around 450 nm, there was a reaction gap where sensitivity could not be measured. The action spectrum of the prey catching behavior was entirely different: maximal sensitivity was found at 500 nm and at 570 nm. Between 500 nm and 334 nm sensitivity decreased continuously for about 1 log unit (Fig. 6).Experiments under chromatic adaptation using the prey catching behavior indicate that the relatively high sensitivity in the ultraviolet range is not due to a separate ultraviolet photoreceptor, but is based on the responses of a photoreceptor maximally sensitive at about 500 nm.Color discrimination was tested by moving a colored worm dummy within a differently colored surround of equal subjective brightness. The salamanders were able to discriminate blue from green, and green from red (Fig. 10). The results can be explained by assuming a trichromatic color vision based on 3 photoreceptor types maximally sensitive around 450 nm, 500 nm and 570 nm (Fig. 12).  相似文献   

17.
An analog of adenosine triphosphate, 2′(or 3′)-O-(2,4,6-trinitrophenyl)adenosine 5′-triphosphate (TNP-ATP), was synthesized as a reporter-labeled substrate of heavy meromyosin ATPase. TNP-ATP was hydrolyzed by heavy meromyosin in the presence of CaCl2 MgCl2 or EDTA.TNP-ATP had absorption maxima at 259 nm, 408 nm and 470 nm at neutral pH. When bound to heavy meromyosin, TNP-ATP underwent the characteristic spectral shift. The difference spectrum resulting from the binding of TNP-ATP to heavy meromyosin at pH 8.0 had positive peaks at 415 nm and 518 nm, and a negative trough at 458 nm.The difference spectrum due to the binding of 2′(or 3′)-O-(2,4,6-trinitrophenyl)adenosine (TNP-adenosine) to heavy meromyosin had small positive peaks at 420 nm and 495 nm. This difference spectrum was similar to that of TNP-ATP or TNP-adenosine produced by 20% (v/v) ethyleneglycol perturbation. The positive peak at 495 nm in the difference spectrum due to the binding of TNP-adenosine to heavy meromyosin shifted toward 505 nm, when pyrophosphate or ATP was added to the reaction mixture.These results suggest that the difference spectrum of TNP-ATP due to the interaction with heavy meromyosin arises not only from the binding of the chromophoric portion of the TNP-ATP molecule but also from that of the phosphate portion.  相似文献   

18.
Sexual communication between male and female fireflies involves the visual detection of species-specific bioluminescent signals. Firefly species vary spectrally in both their emitted light and in the sensitivity of the eye, depending on the time when each is active. Tuning of spectral sensitivity in three firefly species that occupy different photic niches was investigated using light and electron microscopy, microspectrophotometry, and intracellular recording to characterize the location and spectral absorption of the screening pigments that filter incoming light, the visual pigments that receive this filtered light, and the visual spectral sensitivity. Twilight-active species had similar pink screening pigments, but the visual pigment of Photinus pyralis peaked near 545 nm, while that of P. scintillans had a λmax near 557 nm. The night-active Photuris versicolor had a yellow screening pigment that was uniquely localized, while its visual pigment was similar to that of P. pyralis. These results show that both screening and visual pigments vary among species. Modeling of spectral tuning indicates that the combination of screening and visual pigments found in the retina of each species provides the best possible match of sensitivity to bioluminescent emission. This combination also produced model sensitivity spectra that closely resemble sensitivities measured either with electroretinographic or intracellular techniques. Vision in both species of Photinus appears to be evolutionarily tuned for maximum discrimination of conspecific signals from spectrally broader backgrounds. Ph. versicolor, on the other hand, appears to have a visual system that offers a compromise between maximum sensitivity to, and maximum discrimination of, their signals. Accepted: 29 September 1999  相似文献   

19.
Summary A comparative action spectroscopical study was made on phototaxis in two genera of cryptomonads (cryptophyte flagellate algae), namely,Cryptomonas (rostratiformis) andChroomonas (nordstedtii andcoeruled). The two genera differ in their characteristic phycobilin pigmentation and, among three species, onlyChroomonas coerulea possesses an eyespot. The two species with no eyespot,Cryptomonas rostratiformis andChroomonas nordstedtii, exhibited positive phototaxis, showing very similar action spectra characterized by a broad band in the region from 450 nm to 650 nm, with an action maximum at about 560 nm; these features are essentially the same as those observed previously forCryptomonas strain CR-1. InCryptomonas rostratiformis, a small peak was also found at 280 nm in the UV-B/C region.Chroomonas coerulea, with eyespot, did not exhibit distinct positive phototaxis in a wide spectral region at any given, even very low, light intensity, but exhibited negative phototaxis of spectral sensitivity maximal at 400–450 nm. These results indicate that the positive phototaxis ofCryptomonas (rostratiformis and CR-1) andChroomonas nordstedtii is mediated by the same, yet unidentified photoreceptor(s).Chroomonas nordstedtii, possessing no phycoerythrin absorbing at 545 nm, also exhibits positive phototaxis at ca. 560 nm, and this result disfavors the so far proposed possibility that the positive phototaxis of the cryptophytes may be mediated by phycobilin pigments. On the other hand, the spectral characteristics of negative phototaxis ofChroomonas coerulea can possibly be ascribed to the presence of an eyespot.  相似文献   

20.
Summary The spectral sensitivity of the peripheral retinular cells R1–6 in nine species of intact flies was determined using non-invasive, optical measurements of the increase in reflectance that accompanies the pupillary response. Our technique is to chronically illuminate a localized region of the eye with a long wavelength beam, adjusted to bring pupillary scattering above threshold, then, after stabilization, to stimulate with monochromatic flashes. A criterion increase in scattering is achieved at each wavelength by adjusting flash intensity. Univariance of the pupillary response is demonstrated by Fig. 3.Action spectra measured with this optical method are essentially the same as the published spectral sensitivity functions measured with intracellular electrophysiological methods (Fig. 4 forCalliphora, Fig. 5 forDrosophila, Fig. 7 forEristalis, and Fig. 8 forMusca). This holds for both the long wavelength peak and the high sensitivity in the UV as was consistently found in all investigated fly species.Spectral sensitivity functions for R1–6 of hover flies (family Syrphidae) are quite different in different regions of the same eye. There can also be substantial differences between the two sexes of the same species. The ventral pole of the eye of femaleAllograpta (Fig. 10) contains receptors with a major peak at 450 nm, similar to those ofEristalis. However, the dorsal pole of the same eye contains receptors with a major peak at 495 nm, similar to those ofCalliphom. Both dorsal and ventral regions of the maleToxomerus eye, and the ventral region of the female eye, contain only the 450 nm type of R1-6 (see Fig. 12). However, the dorsal region of the female eye also contains another spectral type of receptor that is maximally sensitive at long wavelength. Eyes of both sexes ofAllograpta (Figs. 10 and 11) contain a mixture of spectral types of receptors R1-6.We thank Dr. Chris Maier of the Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station, for determination of the Syrphidae. This work was supported by grants EY01140 and EY00785 from the National Eye Institute, U.S.P.H.S., (to GDB), by the Connecticut Lions Eye Research Foundation (to GDB), and by the Netherlands Organization for the Advancement of Pure Research (Z.W.O.), (to DGS).  相似文献   

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