Abstract

The structural organization of the eyes belonging to 12 winged male and 12 wingless female Orgyia antiqua moths, exposed for 1 h to UV-radiation ( λ max = 351 nm) of 1.4 kW/m 2, was compared with that of 12 male and 12 female non-irradiated control specimens. Following the UV-exposure, the screening pigments were found in a position indicative of extreme light-adaptation. Extensive formations of vesicles along the perimeter of the cones as well as disintegrating ER in the cone cytoplasm were noticeable, especially in the eye of the female. On the retinal side of the clearzone, the microvilli of the rhabdoms had become affected by the UV in characteristic ways: in the male eye, retinal cell damage in the form of microvillar swellings and disintegrations were largely confined to just two cells per ommatidium, placed opposite to each other. The female eye, once again, exhibited greater vulnerability and more widespread microvillar disruptions that affected all of the ommatidial retinula cells. The greater resistance of the eye of the male to an exposure with UV makes sense, if we consider the consequences of the retinal damage, which would clearly be a more severe handicap for an actively flying individual than for an almost sedentary one like the wingless female.

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