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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Journal of molecular evolution 45 (1997), S. 524-534 
    ISSN: 1432-1432
    Keywords: Key words: Opsin — Phylogeny — Crayfish — Cambaridae — Vision — Wavelength — Maximum likelihood — Ancestral sequences
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract. This study examines the diverse maximum wavelength absorption (λmax) found in crayfishes (Decapoda: Cambaridae and Parastacidae) and the associated genetic variation in their opsin locus. We measured the wavelength absorption in the photoreceptors of six species that inhabit environments of different light intensities (i.e., burrows, streams, standing waters, and subterranean waters). Our results indicate that there is relatively little variation in λmax (522–530 nm) among species from different genera and families. The existing variation did not correlate with the habitat differences of the crayfishes studied. We simultaneously sequenced the rhodopsin gene to identify the amino acid replacements that affect shifts in maximum wavelength absorption. We then related these to changes that correlated with shifts in λmax by reconstructing ancestral character states using a maximum-likelihood approach. Using amino acid sequences obtained from five species (all were 301 amino acids in length), we identified a number of candidates for producing shifts of 4 to 8 nm in λmax. These amino acid replacements occurred in similar regions to those involved in spectral shifts in vertebrates.
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-1351
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary 1. ERG S(λ) were determined in darkadapted intact preparations of 6 North American firefly species (Photinus collustrans, marginellus, pyralis, macdermotti, scintillans and Bicellonycha wickershamorum) which restrict their flashing activity to twilight hours. The curves possess narrow (1/2 bandwidth=50–60 nm) peaks in the yellow (560–580 nm) and a shoulder in the violet (370–420 nm), with amarked attenuation (1.4–2.2 log units) of sensitivity in the green (480–530 nm) region of the spectrum (Fig. 1). Two additional species (Photuris potomaca and frontalis) which initiate flashing at twilight and continue on late into the night (twi-night) possess broad sensitivity maxima around 560 nm (Fig. 3). 2. Selective adaptation experiments isolated near-UV and yellow inP. scintillans (Fig. 2). In the dorsal frontal region of the compound eyes inP. frontalis, high sensitivity existed only in the short wavelength region (near-UV and blue) with a maximum in the blue (λ max 435 nm) (Fig. 4). 3. The in situ MSP absorption spectrum of the screening pigments was determined in preparations of firefly retina. a) Two kinds of dark brown granules were found in the clear zone region. These granules absorb all across the spectrum with a gradual increase in optical density in the shorter wavelength region inP. pyralis (Fig. 5). b) Besides dark granules, pink-to-red colored screening pigments were present in the vicinity of the rhabdoms. The absorption spectra of these pigments determined in five species were narrow (1/2 bandwidth=50–80 nm) with species-specific differences in their peak absorption in the green at 525 nm, 510 nm, 512 nm and 517 nm inP. scintillans, macdermotti, collustrans and pyralis, respectively (Fig. 6). A similar pigment was found inP. marginellus with aλ max at 512 nm (Fig. 7). In all cases, transmission increased both at long and short wavelengths, but more sharply in the long wavelength region (Figs. 6 and 7). Hence each twilight-restricted species has its own unique colored screening pigment. A yellow pigment whose absorption spectrum differed from those found in genusPhotinus was found in twi-night activePhoturis potomaca (λ max 461 nm) and night-activeP. versicolor (λ max 456 nm). The transmission of thePhoturis pigment increased sharply only in the long wavelength region (Fig. 8). 4. In the twilight-restricted species, pink-to-red screening pigments modify dramatically the long green wavelength part of S(λ) functions. The calculated effect of the absorption of these screening pigments (O.D.=1.6 to 2.2; ¯X=1.8, n=4) on a theoretical S(λ) curve represented by a green (P550) rhodopsin, match the shape of the experimentally obtained dark-adapted ERG S(λ) in all cases (Figs. 9, 10). These screening pigments (Figs. 6, 7, 8) then would cause attenuation of sensitivity selectively in the green in twilight-restricted fireflies (Fig. 1) with a concomitant shifting of the peak of the sensitivity in the yellow as well as a narrowing of the visual spectral sensitivity. The pink-to-red colored screening pigments presumably would enhance color and/or brightness contrast in the mesopic range of ambient illumination. 5. The presence of the colored screens attenuates absolute sensitivity from 5–25% among different twilight-active species as compared to a night-activePhoturis lucicrescens (Fig. 11).
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Journal of comparative physiology 164 (1989), S. 737-749 
    ISSN: 1432-1351
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary 1. The noninvasive techniques of intracellular optical physiology were used to measure reflectance changes in the deep pseudopupils of various regions of the apposition compound eyes of 3 species of stomatopod crustaceans. 2. Upon exposure to light, prominent changes in reflectance were observed in all eye regions of all species studied. Generally, the response was an increasing reflectance following stimulus onset; however, in the lateral rows of the central ommatidial band of gonodactyloid stomatopods, the response was a rapid decrease in reflectance. Halftimes for the normal, increasing response were about 5 s in the gonodactyloid species and an order of magnitude longer in the squilloid species. 3. The reflectance changes were probably produced by pupillary mechanisms similar to those previously described for insects. Evidence for this included the form and speed of the response, the observation that fluorescence from the visual pigment diminished with a similar time course to the increase in reflectance, and the tendency of the response to sensitize to repeated stimulation. 4. Two spectral classes of photoreceptor were distinguishable in both the peripheral and central band regions of the eye. These classes were most sensitive to ultraviolet (360 nm) or long-wavelength (500 nm) light. The classes were distinguishable by the form and speed of the reflectance changes they produced when stimulated. Results of univariance experiments suggested that only these 2 classes existed in each eye region examined. 5. In all species and ocular regions examined, the reflectance-change response operated over an intensity range of 3–4 orders of magnitude.
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  • 4
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Journal of comparative physiology 156 (1985), S. 679-687 
    ISSN: 1432-1351
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary Stomatopod crustaceans are visually active animals which have large, mobile compound eyes of unique design. Aspects of their ecology and behavior suggest they may be able to discriminate hues. Isolated rhabdoms of the squillid stomatopod,Squilla empusa, were investigated using microspectrophotometry and fluorometry. A single rhodopsin, ofλ max507 nm, exists in the main rhabdom. Its stable metarhodopsin, withλ max503 nm, possesses typical arthropod fluorescence characteristics. No evidence was found for a visual pigment with peak absorption in the ultraviolet. Vision in this animal might therefore be monochromatic.
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  • 5
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Journal of comparative physiology 168 (1991), S. 233-240 
    ISSN: 1432-1351
    Keywords: Optokinesis ; Eye movements ; Mantis shrimp ; Stomatopod ; Orientation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary 1. We investigated optokinetic eye movements in 3 species of stomatopod crustaceans (Odontodactylus scyllarus, Pseudosquilla ciliata, and Gonodactylus oer stedii), all of which are members of the superfamily Gonodactyloidea, by making video recordings of their behavior when placed at the center of a rotating striped drum. Results from these species were sufficiently similar to permit a general description of optokinesis in gono dactyloid stomatopods. 2. Within the range of drum speeds tested (0.40 to 33.6° s-1), the eyes frequently moved smoothly in the direction of the drum's rotation. The movements of the 2 eyes were only weakly coordinated, and optokinesis occurred with an irregular and intermittent time course. 3. Closed-loop gains varied with the drum's speed of rotation, ranging from 0.4 to near 1.0. The gain did not depend on the orientation of the eye in space, remaining relatively constant as the eye swung on its point of at tachment to the anterior end of the animal or rotated on the eyestalk axis. 4. In O. scyllarus (the only species tested), optokinetic eye movements in the animal's vertical, dorsoventral plane occurred with characteristics similar to those in the horizontal plane.
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  • 6
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Journal of comparative physiology 133 (1979), S. 311-315 
    ISSN: 1432-1351
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary Response spectra for positive phototaxis of the planktonic first stage larvae of 7 species of estuarine intertidal crabs were measured. Species living highest intertidally as adults generally have larvae with good ultraviolet (UV) and blue/green sensitivity, while those from adults living lower intertidally lack the UV sensitivity. Comparison of the measured spectra with previous studies of adults indicates that there is probably no change in spectral sensitivity throughout development. This sensitivity is well adapted to the adult intertidal environment, but is not adapted for a planktonic existence in estuarine areas.
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  • 7
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Journal of comparative physiology 166 (1989), S. 261-275 
    ISSN: 1432-1351
    Keywords: Photoreceptor ; Retina ; Spectral sensitivity ; Stomatopod ; Visual pigment
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary 1. We examined the compound eyes of 2 species of gonodactyloid stomatopods, Gonodactylus oerstedii and Pseudosquilla ciliata, using end-on microspectrophotometry of frozen sections of dark-adapted retinas. 2. The cornea and crystalline cones of both species were virtually transparent from 350 to 700 nm. Primary screening pigment granules in the retinular cells had the broad absorption spectra typical of ommochromes. Colored vesicles, of unknown function, also were found in the cytoplasm of the retinular cells. The intrarhabdomal filters appeared to act as long-pass spectral filters, and had maximum optical densities in situ of 0.94 to 11.1. 3. A variety of visual pigments were found in both species, each in a specific retinal region. Their maximum absorption peaked at wavelengths from 400 nm to well beyond 530 nm. 4. Spectral sensitivity functions of all retinal regions were estimated. In both species, each of the 4 most dorsal ommatidial rows of the central band had a pair of narrow spectral sensitivitity curves, usually separated by 50 to 75 nm. These 4 pairs covered the spectrum from below 400 to beyond 650 nm. The other 2 rows of the central band had identical, broad sensitivity functions. Spectral sensitivities of all peripheral ommatidia in each species were identical, but different from any region of the central band. 5. These stomatopod species have retained the typical crustacean layered rhabdoms in the peripheral retina and the 2 most ventral rows of the central band, but have converted the photoreceptors of the 4 dorsal rows of the central band into as many as 8 narrowly tuned spectral classes. This design could serve a high-quality hue discrimination system.
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  • 8
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Journal of comparative physiology 162 (1988), S. 463-478 
    ISSN: 1432-1351
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary 1. The visual pigments of 27 species of crabs from a variety of habitats were investigated by microspectrophotometry of the isolated rhabdomeric photoreceptors. The rhodopsins ranged inλ max from 473 to 515 nm (Tables 1 and 2). No evidence was found for the presence of more than a single rhodopsin in retinular cells 1–7. 2. All rhodopsins produced thermally stable metarhodopsins on irradiation with long-wavelength light. The metarhodopsins of hermit crabs (Anomura: section Paguridea) all absorbed hypsochromically to their rhodopsins. Brachyuran metarhodopsins. with the exception of that ofCancer irroratus, absorbed at the same spectral position as the rhodopsin or bathochromically to it. 3. The absorption spectra of all rhodopsins but one could be fit closely by the Dartnall nomogram. Since prior studies have located only retinal in the eyes of crabs, retinal may serve universally as a chromophore in crab visual pigments
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  • 9
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Journal of comparative physiology 162 (1988), S. 479-490 
    ISSN: 1432-1351
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary 1. Underwater downwelling quantal irradiance spectra were measured in estuarine and coastal areas under various tidal and rainfall conditions. At midday the available spectrum near the bottom has maximal irradiance in the region of about 570 to 700 nm in the estuary, whereas in offshore coastal areas greatest irradiance occurs between 500 and 570 nm. At twilight in an estuary, maximal underwater downwelling irradiance shifts to the 490–520 nm region. 2. The visual pigment absorption maxima of 27 species of benthic crustaceans from semi-terrestrial, estuarine and coastal areas have values ranging from 483 to 516 nm. There is no obvious shift in theλ max from long wavelengths in estuarine species to shorter wavelengths in coastal species. The only match betweenλ max and midday spectrum was for a continental shelf species,Geryon quinquedens. 3. The Sensitivity Hypothesis is predicted to account for the visual sensitivity of benthic crabs from estuarine and coastal areas. To assess the match between visual spectral sensitivity and environmental spectra, photon capture effectiveness was calculated for a range of idealized visual pigment absorption functions operating in the measured environmental spectra. 4. All crab species are poorly adapted for maximal photon capture at midday, since pigments havingλ max longer than 540 nm function best under all daytime spectral conditions. Photon capture of visual pigments withλ max near 500 nm improves dramatically at twilight, particularly at lower visual pigment densities and shallow depths. However, pigments havingλ max at wavelengths longer than those for the crabs are equally or more efficient at photon capture. Therefore the Sensitivity Hypothesis is not supported for crustaceans.
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  • 10
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Cytoskeleton ; Retinular cells ; Compound eyes ; Microtubules ; Microtubule polarity ; Pigment granule migration ; Actin ; Gonodactylus oerstedii (Crustacea, Stomatopoda)
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Retinular cells of the compound eyes of stomatopods (mantis shrimps) contain screening pigment granules that migrate radially in response to light. To clarify the role of the cytoskeleton in these movements, we have performed light microscopy and ultrastructural analyses of cytoskeletal organelles in retinular cells. Rhodamine phalloidin staining indicates that filamentous actin is a component of microvillar rhabdomeres and zonula adherens between retinular cells. Ultrastructural studies reveal three populations of microtubules in retinular cells that differ in their orientations and labilities to fixation. Two of these populations are oriented longitudinally in cells: the soma microtubules, found primarily in a column in the cell soma, and the more labile palisade microtubules, which extend alongside the palisade vacuole near the rhabdomere. The third, most labile microtubule population, and filaments 9–30 nm in diameter, are oriented radially in retinular cells, some within cytoplasmic bridges that span the palisade. The radial microtubules and filaments are appropriately oriented for participating in pigment granule migration. Determination of microtubule polarities in retinular cells by decoration with endogenous tubulin indicates that palisade and soma microtubules contain subpopulations having opposite polarity orientations, as has been observed in neuronal dendrites. In contrast, neighboring pigment cells contain microtubules uniformly oriented with minus ends towards the nucleus, as has been observed in most cell types studied.
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