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1.
The two most common mechanisms of pupillary screening-pigment migration in arthropod superposition eyes are the cone and longitudinal pigment migration mechanisms. The dynamics of each were investigated by optical modelling and by determining experimentally the relationship between eye glow brightness and screening pigment position within the eyes of two representative insect species: the noctuid moth Agrotis infusa and the dung beetle Copris elphenor. During dark adaptation, in both mechanisms, the screening pigment is contracted distally to expose the proximal half of each crystalline cone. During light adaptation the pigment migrates proximally and reduces light flux in the retina. In the longitudinal mechanism, pigment migrates into the clear zone of the eye. In the cone mechanism, pigment never enters the clear zone and is instead restricted to the proximal half of each crystalline cone: a migrating sleeve of pigment creates a small aperture at the end of the crystalline cone, the area of which depends on the degree of light adaptation. According to the model, the cone mechanism provides a limited range of light attenuation (ca. 0.6 log units) for which both good spatial resolution and accuracy of control are maintained, and within this range attenuation is controlled very finely. Beyond this range, whilst attenuation is still possible, diffraction at the pigment aperture and increasing coarseness of control worsen visual performance significantly. In contrast, the longitudinal mechanism provides a much larger useful range of light attenuation (up to several log units) and maintains reasonable fineness of attenuation control over the entire range (although not as fine as the cone mechanism). The experimental results support the model. An extensive survey of arthropods with superposition eyes reveals that the cone mechanism is almost exclusively possessed by those animals experiencing a narrow range of light intensities, and the longitudinal mechanism by those experiencing a wide range.Dedicated to Professor Rolf Elofsson on the occasion of his retirement from the Chair of Zoology in Lund  相似文献   

2.
Superposition optics and the time of flight in onitine dung beetles   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Dung beetles fly to fresh dung, with vision essential for flight navigation. The daily period of flight varies among different species: some beetles fly only in sunlight, others only when ambient light levels change rapidly during dusk or dawn and others in the constant dark of night. Measurements of the optical properties of the lenses, eye geometry and photoreceptor dimensions were used in a computer ray-tracing model to determine the optical performance of the superposition eyes of nine species of onitine dung beetles. Eye sensitivity to light is determined mainly by body size, by the refractive-index parameters and size of the crystalline cones, and by the photoreceptor dimensions. Based on the optics of the ommatidial lenses and absorption of light in the retina, the most sensitive eyes, found in the crepuscular-nocturnal beetles, are 85 times or nearly two log units more sensitive than the eyes of the diurnal beetles. Three possible criteria are considered to determine the best position for the retina: maximum amount of light absorbed in the target rhabdom; maximum amount of light falling on the target rhabdom (best focus); and maximum resolution. The structure and physiological optics of the superposition compound eyes of an onitine dung beetle are matched to the range of light intensities at which it flies. Accepted: 4 February 1998  相似文献   

3.
Observations of the infrared deep pseudopupil, optical determinations of the corneal nodal point, and histological methods were used to relate the visual fields of individual rhabdomeres to the array of ommatidial optical axes in four insects with open rhabdoms: the tenebrionid beetle Zophobas morio, the earwig Forficula auricularia, the crane fly Tipula pruinosa, and the backswimmer Notonecta glauca.The open rhabdoms of all four species have a central pair of rhabdomeres surrounded by six peripheral rhabdomeres. At night, a distal pigment aperture is fully open and the rhabdom receives light over an angle approximately six times the interommatidial angle. Different rhabdomeres within the same ommatidium do not share the same visual axis, and the visual fields of the peripheral rhabdomeres overlap the optical axes of several near-by ommatidia. During the day, the pigment aperture is considerably smaller, and all rhabdomeres share the same visual field of about two interommatidial angles, or less, depending on the degree of light adaptation. The pigment aperture serves two functions: (1) it allows the circadian rhythm to switch between the night and day sampling patterns, and (2) it works as a light driven pupil during the day.Theoretical considerations suggest that, in the night eye, the peripheral retinula cells are involved in neural pooling in the lamina, with asymmetric pooling fields matching the visual fields of the rhabdomeres. Such a system provides high sensitivity for nocturnal vision, and the open rhabdom has the potential of feeding information into parallel spatial channels with different tradeoffs between resolution and sensitivity. Modification of this operational principle to suit a strictly diurnal life, makes the contractile pigment aperture superfluous, and decreasing angular sensitivities together with decreasing pooling fields lead to a neural superposition eye.Abbreviations DPP deep pseudopupil - LMC large monopolar cell  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
Summary The hypothesis that the glow observable in dark adapted butterfly eyes is extinguished upon light adaptation by the action of migrating retinula cell pigment granules (Stavenga, 1975a) has been investigated. Experimental procedures applying optical methods to intact, living animals were similar to those used previously to investigate the migration of retinula cell pigment granules in Hymenoptera (Stavenga and Kuiper, 1977). The data obtained from nymphalid butterflies and Hymenoptera show close parallels, favouring the pigment migration hypothesis.The retinula cell pigment granules control the light flux in the butterfly rhabdom and hence are part of a pupil mechanism. The range of action of this pupil mechanism is about 3 log units of light intensity. The speed of pupil closure is slowed down with longer dark adaptation times. The way in which pupil processes can be distinguished from photochemical processes of the visual pigment is discussed.  相似文献   

6.
The apposition compound eye of a nocturnal bee, the halictid Megalopta genalis, is described for the first time. Compared to the compound eye of the worker honeybee Apis mellifera and the diurnal halictid bee Lasioglossum leucozonium, the eye of M. genalis shows specific retinal and optical adaptations for vision in dim light. The major anatomical adaptations within the eye of the nocturnal bee are (1) nearly twofold larger ommatidial facets and (2) a 4–5 times wider rhabdom diameter than found in the diurnal bees studied. Optically, the apposition eye of M. genalis is 27 times more sensitive to light than the eyes of the diurnal bees. This increased optical sensitivity represents a clear optical adaptation to low light intensities. Although this unique nocturnal apposition eye has a greatly improved ability to catch light, a 27-fold increase in sensitivity alone cannot account for nocturnal vision at light intensities that are 8 log units dimmer than during daytime. New evidence suggests that additional neuronal spatial summation within the first optic ganglion, the lamina, is involved.B.G. is thankful for travel awards from the Royal Physiographic Society, the Per Westlings Fond, the Foundation of Dagny and Eilert Ekvall and the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. E.J.W. is grateful for the support of a Smithsonian Short-Term Research Fellowship, the Swedish Research Council, the Crafoord Foundation, the Wenner-Gren Foundation and the Royal Physiographic Society of Lund for their ongoing support  相似文献   

7.
The apposition acone eye of Labidura is relatively small—550–600 facets—with a thick corneal lens and shallow retina. The retinula cell columns are each formed of six peripheral cells plus two central cells, a partially fused rhabdom, and dense pigment in two or three cell types. Upon adaptation from light to dark, the most striking photomechanical response is a proximal broadening of the cone cells, which results in a 38-fold increase in cross-sectional area of the aperture. While longitudinal rhabdom movement is small, microvillar diameters swell in response to light and contract in the dark. Irregularities of facet pattern and shape, and in ommatidial alignment were found, particularly towards eye margins. Three types of interommatidial sense organs on the eye surface are described, one of which has not been previously reported. An argument is presented to explain how the field of view and sensitivity are both apparently decreased in the acone eye by exposure to light.  相似文献   

8.
Neural and Photochemical Mechanisms of Visual Adaptation in the Rat   总被引:20,自引:13,他引:7       下载免费PDF全文
The effects of light adaptation on the increment threshold, rhodopsin content, and dark adaptation have been studied in the rat eye over a wide range of intensities. The electroretinogram threshold was used as a measure of eye sensitivity. With adapting intensities greater than 1.5 log units above the absolute ERG threshold, the increment threshold rises linearly with increasing adapting intensity. With 5 minutes of light adaptation, the rhodopsin content of the eye is not measurably reduced until the adapting intensity is greater than 5 log units above the ERG threshold. Dark adaptation is rapid (i.e., completed in 5 to 10 minutes) until the eye is adapted to lights strong enough to bleach a measurable fraction of the rhodopsin. After brighter light adaptations, dark adaptation consists of two parts, an initial rapid phase followed by a slow component. The extent of slow adaptation depends on the fraction of rhodopsin bleached. If all the rhodopsin in the eye is bleached, the slow fall of threshold extends over 5 log units and takes 2 to 3 hours to complete. The fall of ERG threshold during the slow phase of adaptation occurs in parallel with the regeneration of rhodopsin. The slow component of dark adaptation is related to the bleaching and resynthesis of rhodopsin; the fast component of adaptation is considered to be neural adaptation.  相似文献   

9.
The rhabdoms of the larval ocelli of the mosquito Aedes aegypti undergo morphological light and dark adaptation over periods of hours. The rhabdom enlarges during dark adaptation and grows smaller during light adaptation. Diminution is exponential, enlargement linear, and rates of change are proportional to log light intensity. Rhabdoms maintained at a constant intensity level off at a constant volume proportional to log intensity. We argue that changes in rhabdom volume after changes in light intensity reflect an influence of light on the turnover of photoreceptro membrane, and that the volumes at which rhabdoms level off represent equilibria between opposed processes of membrane loss and renewal.  相似文献   

10.
The fine structure of the compound eyes of the adult diving beetle Agabus japonicus is described with light, scanning, and transmission electron microscopy. The eye of A. japonicus is mango‐shaped and consists of about 985 ommatidia. Each ommatidium is composed of a corneal facet lens, an eucone type of crystalline cone, a fused layered rhabdom with a basal rhabdomere, seven retinula cells (including six distal cells and one basal cell), two primary pigment cells and an undetermined number of secondary pigment cells that are restricted to the distalmost region of the eye. A clear‐zone, separating dioptric apparatus from photoreceptive structures, is not developed and the eye thus resembles an apposition eye. The cross‐sectional areas of the rhabdoms are relatively large indicative of enhanced light‐sensitivity. The distal and central region of the rhabdom is layered with interdigitating microvilli suggesting polarization sensitivity. According to the features mentioned above, we suggest that 1) the eye, seemingly of the apposition type, occurs in a taxon for which the clear‐zone (superposition) eye is characteristic; 2) the eye possesses adaptations to function in a dim‐light environment; 3) the eye may be sensitive to underwater polarized light or linearly water‐reflected polarized light. J. Morphol. 275:1273–1283, 2014. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

11.
A number of differences exists between the compound eyes of larval and adult rock lobsters, Panulirus longipes. The larval eye more closely resembles the apposition type of compound eye, in which retinula cells and rhabdom lie immediately below the cone cells. The adult eye, on the other hand, is a typical clear-zone photoreceptor in which cones and retinula cell layers are separated by a wide transparent region. The rhabdom of the larval eye, if cut longitudinally, exhibits a "banded" structure over its entire length; in the adult the banded part is confined to the distal end, and the rhabdom is tiered. Both eyes have in common an eighth, distally-located retinula cell, which possesses orthogonally-oriented microvilli, and a peculiar lens-shaped "crystal", which appears to focus light onto the narrow column of the distal rhabdom. Migration of screening pigment on dark-light adaptation is accompanied by changes in sensitivity and resolution of the eye. Retinula cells belonging to one ommatidium do not arrange into one single bundle of axons, but interweave with axons of four neighbouring facets in an extraordinarily regular fashion.  相似文献   

12.
Comparative electrophysiological and histological studies were made on the functional significance of the secondary iris pigment migration for the sensitivity of the eye in the noctuid moth Cerapteryx graminis. The pigment position at different adapting light intensities was studied as well as the influence of different positions on the sensitivity of the eye. Adapting light intensities above a certain value hold the pigment in light position. At a 3 log units lower intensity the pigment is brought into dark position and at light intensities between these limiting values the pigment attains intermediate positions. The results indicate that at light intensities between the limiting values the pigment shifts closely follow the changes in intensity of the environmental light. With the pigment in dark position the eye is about 1000 times more sensitive than when the pigment is in light position, there being a close relationship between the sensitivity of the eye and the position of the pigment at intermediate positions.  相似文献   

13.
Summary In the superposition eyes of the sphingid moth Deilephila and the neuropteran Ascalaphus, adjustment to different intensities is subserved by longitudinal migrations of screening pigment in specialized pigment cells. Using ophthalmoscopic techniques we have localized the light-sensitive trigger that controls pigment position.In both species, local illumination of a small spot anywhere within the eye glow of a dark-adapted eye evokes local light adaptation in the ommatidia whose facets receive the light. Details of the response pattern demonstrate that a distal light-sensitive trigger is located axially in the ommatidium, just beneath the crystalline cone, and extends with less sensitivity deep into the clear zone. The distal trigger in Deilephila was shown to be predominantly UV sensitive, and a UV-absorbing structure, presumably the distal trigger, was observed near the proximal tip of the crystalline cone.In Ascalaphus we also found another trigger located more proximally, which causes local pigment reaction in the ommatidia whose rhabdoms are illuminated (the centre of the eye glow). The light-sensitive trigger for this response appears to be the rhabdom itself.  相似文献   

14.
Summary After intense orange adapting exposures that convert 80% of the rhodopsin in the eye to metarhodopsin, rhabdoms become covered with accessory pigment and appear to lose some microvillar order. Only after a delay of hours or even days is the metarhodopsin replaced by rhodopsin (Cronin and Goldsmith 1984). After 24 h of dark adaptation, when there has been little recovery of visual pigment, the photoreceptor cells have normal resting potentials and input resistances, and the reversal potential of the light response is 10–15 mV (inside positive), unchanged from controls. The log V vs log I curve is shifted about 0.6 log units to the right on the energy axis, quantitatively consistent with the decrease in the probability of quantum catch expected from the lowered concentration of rhodopsin in the rhabdoms. Furthermore, at 24 h the photoreceptors exhibit a broader spectral sensitivity than controls, which is also expected from accumulations of metarhodopsin in the rhabdoms. In three other respects, however, the transduction process appears to be light adapted: (i) The voltage responses are more phasic than those of control photoreceptors. (ii) The relatively larger effect (compared to controls) of low extracellular Ca++ (1 mmol/1 EGTA) in potentiating the photoresponses suggests that the photoreceptors may have elevated levels of free cytoplasmic Ca++. (iii) The saturating depolarization is only about 30% as large as the maximal receptor potentials of contralateral, dark controls, and by that measure the log V-log I curve is shifted downward by 0.54 log units. The gain (change in conductance per absorbed photon) therefore appears to have been diminished.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Pigment granule migration in pigment cells and retinula cells of the digger wasp Sphex cognatus Smith was analysed morphologically after light adaptation to natural light, dark adaptation and after four selective chromatic adaptations in the range between 358 nm and 580 nm and used as the index of receptor cell sensitivity. The receptor region of each ommatidium consists of nine retinula cells which form a centrally located rhabdom. Two morphologically and physiologically different visual units can be described, defined by the arrangement of the rhabdomeric microvilli, the topographical relationship of the receptor cells with respect to the eye axes and the unique retinula cell screening pigmentation. These two different sets of ommatidia (type A and B) are randomly distributed in a ratio of 13 throughout the eye (Ribi, 1978b). Chromatic adaptation experiments with wavelengths of 358 nm, 443 nm, 523 nm and 580 nm and subsequent histological examination reveal two UV receptors, two blue receptors and four yellow-green receptors in type A ommatidia and two UV receptors and six green to yellow-green receptors in type B ommatidia. The pigments in cells surrounding each ommatidium (two primary pigment cells, 20 secondary pigment cells and four pigmented cone extensions) were not affected significantly by the adaptation experiments.  相似文献   

16.
Using infrared reflectometry of the deep pseudopupil, we have measured the absolute sensitivity, the dynamic range and the speed of the pupil mechanism in the acone apposition eye of two tenebrionid beetles: Zophobas morio F. and Tenebrio molitor L. The following conclusions are made from the results:
  1. There is a substantial difference in sensitivity of the pupil mechanism between the two beetle species. The pupil is about 5.3 log units more sensitive in Zophobas than in Tenebrio.
  2. There is also a difference in sensitivity between day and night. Surprisingly, the sensitivity is higher at day-time, and the difference is about 0.5 log units in both Zophobas and Tenebrio.
  3. Light adaptation is completed faster during daytime than at night in both Zophobas and Tenebrio, whereas dark adaptation is completed about equally fast both day and night in both species. The speed of the pupil response, however, is dependent on the preceding adaptation history.
  4. The pupil mechanism in both species is under the influence of a circadian rhythm, which determines the size of the pupil aperture in such a way that the pupil is maximally open when dark-adapted at night, but only partially open when dark-adapted at daytime.
The differences in sensitivity and dynamics of the pupil mechanism between day and night are mainly due to the circadian rhythm setting the control range of the pupil aperture in both Zophobas and Tenebrio. The pupil differences between the two beetles are discussed regarding behavioural differences between the two species.  相似文献   

17.
飞蝗复眼生理和结构上的节律变化   总被引:7,自引:3,他引:4  
采用细胞内记录和光镜方法研究了飞蝗(Locusta migratoria)夜间和日间在暗适应和明适应状态下小网膜细胞角敏感度以及晶锥和小网膜细胞之间区域结构上的变化.结果表明小网膜细胞角敏感度的变化不仅仅由于晶锥周围主色素细胞色素颗粒的移动,而且也由于小眼感杆束结构上的节律变化.  相似文献   

18.
A comparative analysis has been carried out of the time course and range of dark adaptation in the compound eyes of some common butterflies and noctuid moths (Lepidoptera). The change in sensitivity of the eye during dark adaptation was determined by measurements of the intensity of illumination necessary to elicit an electrical response of a given magnitude of the eye. It was found that the curve for dark adaptation in the diurnal species was smooth. The range of adaptive change varied in different species but usually did not cover more than 1 to 1.5 log units. In the nocturnal species the dark adaptation was found to proceed in two phases. The first phase was usually completed in less than 10 minutes and covered a range of 1 to 1.5 log units. The second phase was more prolonged and covered a range of 2 to 3 log units. In some of the experiments on nocturnal species the second phase failed to appear. Measurements of the size of the response at different intensities showed that the intensity/amplitude relationship was the same in the light-adapted eye as in the dark-adapted eye. In the nocturnal insects the response of the eye in the light-adapted condition was about 20 per cent of that in the dark-adapted eye, while in diurnal insects it was about 60 per cent.  相似文献   

19.
The level of dark adaptation of the whirligig beetle can be measured in terms of the threshold intensity calling forth a response. The course of dark adaptation was determined at levels of light adaptation of 6.5, 91.6, and 6100 foot-candles. All data can be fitted by the same curve. This indicates that dark adaptation follows parts of the same course irrespective of the level of light adaptation. The intensity of the adapting light determines the level at which dark adaptation will begin. The relation between log aI 0 (instantaneous threshold) and log of adapting light intensity is linear over the range studied.  相似文献   

20.
The fine structure of the principal compound eye of the shrimp, Palaemonetes, was studied under conditions of light and dark adaptation. Ommatidium the situation in other decapod crustaceans. Light and dark adapted eyes differ in that the rhabdom changes its shape; morphological evidence suggests a possible sequence of events involving production, utilization, and degradation of photoreceptor membrane, a discontinuous process occurring only during changes from light to dark and dark to light. A hypothesis of membrane turnover is proposed.  相似文献   

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