Scanning eye movements of the stomatopod crustacean,Neogonodactylus oerstedii,in polarized light fields |
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Authors: | Mary F. Durham Chan Lin |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Maryland, Baltimore, MD, USA;2. Biology Department, Doane University, Crete, NE, USA |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACTStomatopod crustaceans have highly mobile, independently moving compound eyes that are sensitive to both linearly and circularly polarized light. They rotate their eyes to predictable angles when viewing a linearly polarized target, and they scan their eyes frequently to sample the visual field. Angles of scans are roughly perpendicular to the plane of the midband (a set of specialized parallel rows of equatorial ommatidia). We investigated scanning eye movements in one Caribbean stomatopod species (Neogonodactylus oerstedii) in uniform visual fields that were vertically polarized, horizontally polarized, or depolarized. We found that mean eye rotation and scan angles differed significantly among these different treatments. Average scan angles differed by 12°, being more horizontal in a vertically polarized field than in a horizontally polarized one, and also more horizontal in a vertically polarized field than in a depolarized field. Thus, these stomatopods adjusted visual scanning to the polarization of the visual environment. |
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Keywords: | Stomatopod eye movement visual scanning polarized light mantis shrimp |
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