Abstract
Bilateral optic stalk severance or lamina-medulla region removal were carried out in 47 adult male crickets Gryllus bimaculatus DeGeer. Effects of the operations on circadian locomotor activity were investigated under 12 h light: 12 h dark and at a constant temperature of 26°C. In the pre-operative days, 39 of the animals showed a typical nocturnal activity rhythm (normal rhythm), but the remaining 8 exhibited an atypical rhythm which is diurnal rather than nocturnal (abnormal rhythm). The operations eventually caused an arrhythmicity in all animals, suggesting that the crucial part of the central nervous system controlling the cricket circadian activity is located in the lamina-medulla region. However, in some of the post-operative crickets, the rhythm did not immediately disappear but persisted for a while: the diurnal increase of activity was observed up to 2 weeks in all 8 abnormal- and 4 normal-rhythm animals. In addition, 8 out of 39 normal-rhythm animals showed a single well-defined post-operative peak which occurred approximately in phase with the nocturnal peak prior to surgery. These results are discussed in relation to a possibility of involvement of the oscillatory structure outside the optic lobes.
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