Abstract

In various insect and arachnid species, three different types of photoreceptors that do not serve image processing have been discovered and analyzed by means of neurobiological methods: They can be found for example: (1) as lamina and lobula organs (LaOs and LoOs) next to the optic neuropils in the optic lobes of holo‐ and hemimetabolous insects; (2) inside the last ganglia of the cord of the scorpion and a marine midge; and (3) as modified visual photoreceptors in metamorphosized larval stemmata and the lateral eyes of scorpions, which have been compound eyes in fossil scorpion relatives. Immunocytology with various antibodies against proteins of the phototransduction cascade, the rhabdom turnover cycle and neurotransmitters of afferent and efferent pathways, was combined with light‐ and ultrastructural investigations in well‐defined adaptational states, in order to study their photoreceptive function and neuronal wiring. Pilot chronobiological experiments with a newly developed twilight simulating lamp, behavioral studies, and model calculations provide evidence that these photoreceptors may well serve a role in the complex task of detecting time cues out of natural dawn and dusk.“…Clearly more work will be necessary before truly informed judgements can be made about the functional significance of the diversity in photoreception for entrainment. A first step will be the precise identification of photoreceptors and investigations of the mechanisms of transduction, processing and transmission of temporal information provided by the daily light cycle.…” ()

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