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Photoreceptor ultrastructure in the Antarctic mussel shrimp Acetabulastoma (Crustacea; Ostracoda), a parasite of Glyptonotus antarcticus (Crustacea; Isopoda)
Authors:V. B. Meyer-Rochow
Affiliation:(1) Department of Biology, University of Oulu, Linnanmaa, FIN-90570 Oulu, Finland (e-mail: vmr@cc.oulu.fi), FI
Abstract:The ultrastructure of the nauplius eye of the tiny Antarctic ostracode Acetabulastoma sp. is described and conclusions about its possible function are drawn. Each of the three eye-cups measures approximately 20 μm in diameter and is optically isolated from its neighbour by screening pigments, which are contained in pigment cells behind a tapetum of concentrically arranged, ca. 1-μm-long and 0.1-μm-thick, crystals. Three and sometimes four separate rhabdoms with microvilli measuring 50–60 nm in diameter project from the concave side of the tapetum up to 5 μm deep into the eye-cup interior, which is filled by the retinula cell bodies with their spherical nuclei and various organelles. Desmosomes and microtubules are seen and light-induced cell or membrane damage was minimal. The observations suggest that the Acetabulastoma eye has photoreceptors that can tolerate an exposure to bright light and it may be used to inform its owner of the approach of danger, the depth of water, and/or the season. Accepted: 27 August 1998
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