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1.
The nauplius eye in Cyclestherida, Laevicaudata and Spinicaudata (previously collectively termed Conchostraca) consists of four cups of inverse sensory cells separated by a pigment layer and a tapetum layer. There are two lateral and two medial cups, a ventral medial cup and a posterior medial cup. The pigment and tapetum layers contain two different kinds of pigment granules, the inner pigment layer relatively large, dark (and electron dense) granules, and the outer tapetum layer light, reflective pigment granules. The presence of four cups and two different kinds of pigment granules are interpreted as autapomorphies of Phyllopoda. The position and shape of the nauplius eye in Spinicaudata is very distinct and herein interpreted as an autapomorphy of this taxon.Additional frontal eyes might be present dorsally or ventrally in varying proximity to the nauplius eye, but they have separate nerves from their sensory cells to the nauplius eye centre in the protocerebrum. Rhabdomeric structures are present in all these frontal eyes, evidencing their light sensitivity. In Lynceus biformis and L. tatei (Laevicaudata), two pairs of frontal eyes were found. In Cyclestheria hislopi (Cyclestherida), an unpaired ventral frontal eye is present. We did not find additional frontal eyes in Limnadopsis parvispinus and Caenestheriella sp. (Spinicaudata).  相似文献   

2.
 The inverse cerebral ocelli of the pelagosphera larva of Golfingia misakiana and of another unidentified larva are composed of two or three sensory cells and one supportive pigmented cell. The sensory cells bear an array of microvilli as well as a single cilium with poor undulation of its membrane; the photoreceptive organelles are regarded as the rhabdomeric type. A striking feature of these cells is the cores, which extend within the microvilli from the tip into the midregion of the cell. It is suggested that these structures are identical with the submicrovillar cisternae found in the cerebral inverse eyes of larvae of Polychaeta. The findings allow the conclusion that in the pelagosphera of the Sipuncula, contrary to the teleplanic veliger larvae of Gastropoda, a lengthy pelagic cycle is not correlated with the development of a ciliary photoreceptor. Additionally, it is assumed that the pigment cup ocelli in larvae of Sipuncula are homologous with the cerebral inverted pigment cup ocelli of larvae of Polychaeta. Accepted: 19 March 1997  相似文献   

3.
Ong JE 《Tissue & cell》1970,2(4):589-610
The nauplius eye consists of one median and two lateral ocelli, each within a pigment cup. The three pigment cups are made up from two multi-nucleate pigment cells: each cell forming one lateral cup and half of the median cup. The three cups are lined on the insides by tapetal cells which contain layers of reflectile crystals. Each of the ocelli contains six sensory cells which protrude from the rims of the pigment cups and the protruding parts are sheathed by the conjunctiva cells. The whole eye is enveloped by a thin membrane which also sheaths the proximal parts of the five nerve bundles that leave the eye. All the sensory cells of the lateral ocelli are similar and have rhabdomeric microvilli on the terminal end, and contain phaosomes and a multitude of other organelles and cytoplasmic inclusions. The complex median ocellus contains a superior group of three retinular cells, linked by interdigitating processes, and an inferior group consisting of a large central cell enclosed in two cup-shaped peripheral retinular cells. A two-tiered rhabdome arrangement exists, with a rather complex inferior rhabdome set made up of a central rhabdomere and two hemi-annulate rhabdomeres. The cytoplasm of the retinular cells of the median ocellus lack phaosomes but instead contain double-walled tubular elements, possibly formed by the inpushings of microvilli into adjacent cells. The possible functional significance of the unique arrangement seen in the median ocellus is discussed. The retinular cells are of the inverse type. There are no efferent nerve fibres from the brain nor any nervous connection between the lateral and the median ocelli.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
Spectral sensitivity curves can be distorted by screening pigments. We have determined whether this is true for Limulus polyphemus by determining, from receptor potentials recorded using intracellular microelectrodes, spectral sensitivity curves for normal animals and for white-eyed animals (which lack screening pigment). Our results show: (a) In median ocelli, the curve for UV-sensitive receptor cells peaks at 360 nm and does not depend on the presence of screening pigment, (b) The curve for ventral eye photoreceptors is identical to that for retinular cells from the lateral eyes of white-eyed animals and peaks at 520–525 nm. (c) In normal lateral eyes, when the stimulating light passes through screening pigment, the curve indicates relatively more sensitivity in the red region of the spectrum than does the curve for white-eyed animals. Therefore, the screening pigment is probably red-transmitting, (d) In median ocelli, the curve for visible-sensitive cells peaks at 525 nm and is approximately the same whether the ocelli are from normal or white-eyed animals. However, the curve is significantly broader than that for ventral eyes and for lateral eyes from white-eyed animals.  相似文献   

6.
Summary The photoreceptors ofPogaina suecica correspond to the type of pigment cup ocelli. Each eye consists of one cup cell and three sensory cells. The most conspicuous differentiations of these eyes are lens elements formed by giant mitochondria densely filled with homogeneous electron-dense material. From electron microscopical findings available to date it is hypothesized that mitochondrial lensing might be an autapomorphy of a taxon comprising the Provorticidae Kirgisellinae, Dalyelliidae and Graffillidae groups which are ascribed to the paraphyletic Dalyellioida.Abbreviations l 1–3 lenses - npc nucleus of the pigment cell - pc pigment cell - pg pigment granule - rh rhabdomeres - sc 1–3 sensory cells  相似文献   

7.
Using electron microscopy we describe an accessory lateral eye for Cylindroiulus, a diplopod. The accessory eye is situated at the cell body rind of the optic lobes, deep inside the head, and is composed of six R-cells; a dioptric apparatus is absent. Comparison reveals that many arthropods possess accessory lateral eyes in addition to the compound eyes or lateral ocelli. Their homology and distribution among the arthropod main lineages is discussed along with characters that may be useful for reconstructing phylogeny.  相似文献   

8.
The lateral eyes of Crustacea and Insecta consist of many single optical units, the ommatidia, that are composed of a small, strictly determined and evolutionarily conserved set of cells. In contrast, the eyes of Myriapoda (millipedes and centipedes) are fields of optical units, the lateral ocelli, each of which is composed of up to several hundreds of cells. For many years these striking differences between the lateral eyes of Crustacea/Insecta versus Myriapoda have puzzled evolutionary biologists, as the Myriapoda are traditionally considered to be closely related to the Insecta. The prevailing hypothesis to explain this paradox has been that the myriapod fields of lateral ocelli derive from insect compound eyes by disintegration of the latter into single ommatidia and subsequent fusion of several ommatidia to form multicellular ocelli. To provide a fresh view on this problem, we counted and mapped the arrangement of ocelli during postembryonic development of a diplopod. Furthermore, the arrangement of proliferating cells in the eyes of another diplopod and two chilopods was monitored by labelling with the mitosis marker bromodeoxyuridine. Our results confirm that during eye growth in Myriapoda new elements are added to the side of the eye field, which extend the rows of earlier-generated optical units. This pattern closely resembles that in horseshoe crabs (Chelicerata) and Trilobita. We conclude that the trilobite, xiphosuran, diplopod and chilopod mechanism of eye growth represents the ancestral euarthropod mode of visual-system formation, which raises the possibility that the eyes of Diplopoda and Chilopoda may not be secondarily reconstructed insect eyes.  相似文献   

9.
The planktonic barnacle larva has a single median ocellus (nauplius eye), while the adult possesses two distinct sets of photoreceptors; a pair of lateral ocelli and a single median ocellus. The nauplius eye of the cypris larva of Balanus amphitrite hawaiiensis is composed of 14 visual cells grouped into three components (a pair of lateral components and a single ventral component) surrounding two centrally located pigment cells; each lateral component consists of 5 visual cells and the ventral component, 4 visual cells. In each component, the rhabdom is made up of apposing microvilli arising directly from the neighboring visual cell bodies.
During metamorphosis into the adult form, the three components of the median ocellus become separated. Each lateral component migrates laterally on the mantle and is remodeled into the adult lateral ocellus, losing two visual cells but gaining new pigment and tapetum cells in the process. The ventral component remains in the mid portion and becomes the adult median ocellus without fundamental modification in composition. The visual cells in both ocelli undergo a marked increase in volume and form many finger-like dendrites. Rhabdomes are made up of interdigitating microvilli arising from the the dendrite tips.  相似文献   

10.
The segmental ocelli (eyes) in specimens of a European and a Chinese Polyophthalmus pictus population have been investigated by transmission electron microscopy. The ocelli are situated in corresponding positions in the same segments and reveal similarities in their general structure. They consist of one photoreceptor cell with microvilli-bearing processes and a pigment cup, the receptor processes project into an extracellular cavity formed by the sensory cell and a few supporting cells, the pigment cup is formed by mesodermal cells, and basiepidermal glial cells and gland cells lie above the sensory cell. However, the ocelli differ in size and number of cells, number and dimensions of cellular elements as well as presence or absence of certain cell types associated with the ocelli. There is only little variation in these characters and there is no overlap, so that they distinctly separate the specimens of the two populations. These differences are in the same range, or even larger, as those observed between the ocelli of other closely related polychaete species. Therefore, the specimens from Qingdao, China, are described as a new species of the Opheliidae, Polyophthalmus qingdaoensis sp.n., although specimens from Qingdao, China, and the Island of Giglio, Italy, are almost inseparable by light microscopy except for a few subtle differences.  相似文献   

11.
In addition to the pigmented ocelli, four different types of photoreceptor-like organs without shading pigment have been found in Saccocirrus papillocercus and S. krusadensis. The sensory cells of these presumed ocelli are either ciliary or rhabdomeric with ciliary rudiments. With the exception of the multicellular type-2 ocelli they are bicellular consisting of a sensory cell and a supportive cell. In each ocellus the supportive cell forms a thin cup-shaped envelope around the sensory elements. In the type-2 ocellus, 7 supportive cells form an ovoid cavity leaving openings through which dendritic processes of an equal number of sensory cells enter the cavity. The pigmented ocelli possess an ocellar cavity communicating with the exterior through a pore in the eyecup, ciliary rudiments in both sensory and supportive cell, and additional non-photoreceptive sensory cells in the opening of the eyecup. The sensory organs show characteristic differences between the two species, such as presence or absence of a particular type of ocellus (type 2 is absent in S. krusadensis, type 3 in S. papillocercus), number of cilia in type-4 ocelli, density of microvilli, number of non-photoreceptive sensory cells in the pore of the pigmented ocellus, etc. These differences provide important characters which can be used for discrimination either of species or of subgeneric taxa in Saccocirrus. The phylogenetic significance of the different photoreceptive organs is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
The four eyes of the prolecithophoran Allostoma sp. are disposed in two pairs in a dorsolateral position at the periphery of the brain and beneath its capsule. They are rhabdomeric pigment-cup ocelli. Each eye in the anterior pair consists of one pigment cell and one receptor cell; each in the posterior pair is made up of a larger, single pigment cell and two photoreceptor cells. A lens in front of the pigment cell's aperture is formed by electron-dense, refractive, finger-like protrusions which arise from unpigmented cytoplasmic extensions of the pigment-cup margin. Degenerative signs are sometimes visible in the lens.  相似文献   

13.
According to molecular sequence data Crustacea and not Myriapoda seem to be the sister‐group to Insecta. This makes it necessary to reconsider how the morphology of their eyes fit with these new cladograms. Homology of facetted eye structures in Insecta (Hexapoda in the sense of Ento‐ and Ectognatha) and Crustacea is clearly supported by identical numbers of cells in an ommatidium (two corneageneous or primary pigment cells, four Semper cells which build the crystalline cone and primarily eight retinula cells). These cell numbers are retained even when great functional modification occurs, especially in the region of the dioptric apparatus. There are two different possibilities to explain differences in eye structure in Myriapoda depending on their phylogenetic position in the cladogram of Mandibulata. In the traditional Tracheata cladogram, eyes of Myriapoda must be secondarily modified. This modification can be explained using the different evolutionary pathways of insect facetted eyes to insect larval eyes (stemmata) as an analogous model system. Comparative morphology of larval insect eyes from all holometabolan orders shows that there are several evolutionary pathways which have led to different types of stemmata and that the process always involved the breaking up the compound eye into individual larval ommatidia. Further evolution led on many occasions to so‐called fusion‐stemmata that occur convergently in each holometabolic order and reveals, in part, great structural similarities to the lateral ocelli of myriapods. As myriapodan eyes cannot be regarded as typical mandibulate ommatidia, their structure can be explained as a modified complex eye evolved in a comparable way to the development to the fusion‐stemmata of insect larvae. The facetted eyes of Scutigera (Myriapoda, Chilopoda) must be considered as secondarily reorganized lateral myriapodan stemmata, the so‐called ‘pseudo‐compound eyes’. New is a crystalline cone‐like vitreous body within the dioptric apparatus. In the new cladogram with Crustacea and Insecta as sister‐groups however, the facetted eyes of Scutigera can be interpreted as an old precursor of the Crustacea – Insecta facetted eye with modified ommatidia having a four‐part crystalline cone, etc. as a synapomorphy. Lateral ocelli of all the other Myriapoda are then modified like insect stemmata. The precursor is then the Scutigera‐Ommatidium. In addition further interpretations of evolutionary pathways of myriapodan morphological characters are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Within the Cnidaria, the occurrence of ocelli at the polyp stage is only known in the species of Stylocoronella (Scyphozoa, Stauromedusae). The light-sensitive organs of S. riedli are ultrastructurally investigated. In this interstitial-living species, each of the up to 24 ocelli is composed of between seven and nine monociliary sensory cells and between one and four pigment cells. A striking feature of the photoreceptive cilia is their peculiar axonemal pattern. This is expressed (a) by the presence of a third central microtubule at a certain point and (b) by the balloon-like swelling of the distal portion of the cilium, with clearly scattered microtubules in this area. Although the polyps of S. riedli show no distinct reaction to light stimuli, the ultrastructural results corroborate the hypothesis that these organs are light-sensitive organs. The possible function of the pigment granules is discussed.Abbreviations bb basal body - c cilium - co collar - csv crescent-shaped vesicle - cv clear vesicle - dcv dense-core vesicles - k kinetosome - m mitochondrion - mvb multivesicular body - n nucleus - oc ocellus - pc piment cell - pg pigment granule - sc sensory cell - sr striated rootlet - v vesicle  相似文献   

15.
 Based on electron-microscopical observations the light-sensing organs of Proxenetes deltoides and Ptychopera westbladi, representatives of the ”Typhloplanoida” Trigonostominae, are described. The photoreceptors in both species belong to the type of rhabdomeric pigment cup ocelli. P. deltoides has a single pigment cell and three sensory cells. P. westbladi possesses eyes made up of a single pigmented cup cell and a single sensory cell. The dioptric apparatus in the eyes of P. deltoides is formed by three proliferations of the cup cell containing giant mitochondria. In P. westbladi, the elements focalizing incoming light also consist of modified mitochondria which are arranged in the section of the cup cell covering the eye cavity. With regard to the new findings, mitochondrial lensing is hypothesized as an autapomorphy of a monophylum encompassing distinct taxa or all members of the free-living Rhabdocoela; the Neodermata also belong to this monophylum. Accepted: 21 March 1996  相似文献   

16.
The coronate larva of the ascophoran bryozoan Watersipora arcuata has a ring of 32 large, multiciliated coronal cells that are used for swimming. Fourteen pairs of small cells are intercalated between the lateral margins of adjacent coronal cells. These intercoronal cells are arranged in a precise pattern and are polymorphic: seven pairs have multiple cilia and seven pairs are mono- or oligociliated. Three pairs of multiciliated intercoronal cells have their cilia arranged as a whorl that is recessed in a pocket formed between the adjacent coronal cells, and they are thought to be photoreceptors that sense general light intensity. Two other pairs of multiciliated cells with cohesive tufts of cilia may be chemo- or mechanoreceptors. Roles of the other intercoronal cells in this species are not evident, but it is proposed that the majority, if not all, of them are sensory. The close proximity of all the intercoronal cells to the equatorial nerve ring is compatible with this interpretation. Analyses of the literature on cleavage patterns, pigment cup ocelli, and flagellar tufts that serve as balancers in coronate larvae lead us to propose that (1) an intercoronal cell is the sensory element of most, if not all, pigment cup ocelli of bryozoan larvae; and (2) intercoronal cells are not modified coronal cells but probably are specialized supra- and/or infracoronal ones that have migrated to an intercoronal position.  相似文献   

17.
Inbreeding of the sexualized planarian, Dugesia ryukyuensis, produces eye‐defective worms, menashi, in the F1 population. To study the effects of this mutation on the eye, we observed the eye‐region of menashi using electron microscopy and compared it with the regenerating eye in wild‐type worms. The intact eye of wild‐type planarians consisted of a few pigment cells and a number of visual cells. Pigment cells containing spherically‐shaped electron‐dense melanosomes contacted each other and enclosed rhabdomes of visual cells. Rhabdomes had numerous tubular microvilli extending radially and touching the pigment cells. However, in menashi, various lengths of tubular microvilli were irregularly distributed near the pigment cells, which contained numerous electron‐lucent premelanosomes, and no adhesive structures were found between the pigment cells. The premelanosomes of menashi were equal in size to those seen after 2 days of regeneration in wild‐type planarians and were similar in maturation to those found after 3 days of regeneration in wild‐type planarian. These results suggest that menashi is defective in the mechanism(s) of developing pigment granules and constructing visual cells. These findings also suggest that pigment cells in menashi are defective in the mechanism(s) involved with cell adhesion.  相似文献   

18.
The fine structure of the four ocelli ofAnoplodactylus petiolatus was examined using serial longitudinal and transversal sections of the eye hill. Each pigment cup ocellus is composed of a (planconvex) cuticular lens, lens forming hypodermal cells, inverse retinula cells with latticed rhabdom and surrounding tapetum and pigment layers. Within the retinula cells a distal “vitreous” zone, a nucleus zone and a proximal rhabdomeric zone can be distinguished. Retinula cell axons originate proximally. The tapetum cells contain several layers of reflecting crystals. Distally, they have a common microvillous region. The intraretinal “vitreous” zone contains glycogen-like particles in the centre and rough ER in the periphery. Contrary to other Pantopoda vitreous cells, a praeretinal membrane and a vertical lens groove have not been observed inAnoplodactylus. While the presence of four (median) ocelli appears to be a primitive characteristic, the inverse orientation of the retinula cells in combination with a tapetum lucidum represents a highly derived characteristic among arthropod median eyes.  相似文献   

19.
大草蛉成虫复眼的外部形态及其显微结构   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
张海强  朱楠  范凡  魏国树 《昆虫学报》2007,50(5):454-460
用扫描电镜和光学显微镜观察了大草蛉Chrysopa pallens Ramber成虫复眼的外部形态及明、暗适应和性别对其显微结构的影响。结果发现:(1)其复眼呈半球形,位于头部两侧,略成“八”字形排列,单个复眼约由3 600个小眼组成,最前和最后小眼之间的夹角约为180°,最上和最下小眼之间的夹角约200°;(2)小眼主要由角膜、晶锥和6~8个小网膜细胞、基膜组成,外围环绕有2个初级虹膜色素细胞和6个次级虹膜色素细胞,基膜处有色素颗粒分布;(3)暗适应时,晶锥开裂程度较大,远端5~7个网膜细胞核向远端移动,与晶锥近端相接或接近,次级虹膜色素颗粒亦向远端移动包围晶锥;明适应时,晶锥开裂程度小或闭合,远端网膜细胞核向近端移动,透明带显现,大部分次级虹膜色素颗粒亦向近端移动分布在小网膜细胞柱周围,包被透明带;(4)在相同的明、暗适应下,雌、雄成虫复眼的显微结构无明显差异。结果表明大草蛉复眼为透明带明显的重叠象眼,其小眼不但具有次级虹膜色素颗粒纵向移动的常规调光机制,还存在晶锥开闭、远端网膜细胞核移动和基膜色素颗粒纵向扩散的调光新机制。  相似文献   

20.
Among ants, Cataglyphis bicolor shows the best performance in optical orientation. Its eye is of the apposition type with a fused rhabdom. Morphological studies on the general struture of the eye as well as the effect of light have been carried out with transmission and scanning electron microscopy. An ommatidium is composed of a dioptric apparatus, consisting of a cornea, corneal process and a crystalline cone, the sensory retinula, which is made up of eight retinula cells in the distal half and of an additional ninth one in the proximal half. The ommatidia are separated from each other by two primary pigment cells, which surround the crystalline cone and an average of 12 secondary pigment cells, which reach from cornea to the basement membrane. The eye of Cataglyphis bicolor possesses a light intensity dependent adaptation mechanism, which causes a radial and distal movement of the pigment granules within the retinula cells and a dilatation of cisternae of the ER along the rhabdom. Until now, no overall order in arrangement of retinula cells or direction of microvilli has been found from ommatidium to ommatidium. Such an order, however, must exist, either on the retina or the lamina level, since we have proven the ant's capacity for polarized light analysis.  相似文献   

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