Abstract

The 3 ocelli of the blowfly Calliphora erythrocephala, grouped close together on the top of the head (Fig. 1), have large, extensively overlapping visual fields. Together they view the entire upper hemisphere of the surroundings plus part of the lower hemisphere (Figs. 5, 7). It is shown for the lateral ocelli that despite the underfocussing of the ocellar lens large patterns are imaged on the receptor mosaic. Because of the astigmatism of the lens, patterns in longitudinal orientations are more accurately represented than in others (Fig. 3). Nevertheless, an artifical horizon rotated around the long axis of the animal does not elicit head roll. Likewise, changes of overall brightness in the visual field of the median and one lateral ocellus elicit only weak phasic-tonic “dorsal light responses” of the animal which supplement the tonic dorsal light responses mediated by the compound eyes (Figs. 9, 10). Our results show that, in Calliphora, the ocelli have little influence on head orientation during flight, and must be assumed to serve other functions.

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