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Spectral responses of sustaining fibers in the optic tracts of crayfish (Procambarus)
Authors:A E R Woodcock  Timothy H Goldsmith
Institution:(1) Department of Biology, Yale University, New Haven, Conn.
Abstract:Summary Spectral response curves were recorded for 60–70 individual sustaining fibers in the optic nerve of the crayfish Procambarus. These cells belong to at least 8 of the 14 classes of sustaining fibers described by Wiersma and Yamaguchi (1966) on the basis of receptive fields. About 90 percent of the cells receive predominant input from yellow-green receptors and are maximally sensitive at 560 to 570 nm; a much smaller number receive principal input from blue receptors and are maximally sensitive near 460 nm.The wavelength sensitivity of optic fibers receiving their major input from yellow-green receptors depends on the state of dark adaptation of the animal and the intensity of illumination. Early in dark adaptation and at high intensities of stimulation the spectral response curve is distorted by light which has been filtered through the sleeves of red-brown shielding pigment. During dark adaptation a shift in maximum spectral response to shorter wavelengths parallels the retraction of the migratory pigment to the ldquodarkrdquo position and the development of retinal glow. The effects are reversed by injecting into a dark-adapted animal an extract of eyestalks containing the hormone controlling pigment migration: the pigment sleeves lengthen, retinal glow disappears, and shoulders or peaks of sensitivity appear in the red region of the spectrum.This work was supported by USPHS research grant EY 00222 to Yale University. A. E. R. W. was aided by a Fulbright-Hays travel grant. We are grateful to Prof. C. A. G. Wiersma and Dr. R. M. Glantz for a helpful demonstration of the recording technique.
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