Abstract

The optics of a variety of stomatopod eyes has been investigated using goniometric eye-mapping techniques and anatomical measurements. The species examined come from 3 of the 4 existing superfamilies: the Gonodactyloidea, Lysiosquilloidea and Squilloidea. This paper examines acuity, optical axes and general features of eye shape. Stomatopod eyes are divided into 3 clearly distinct zones; the mid-band and two hemispheres. Each hemisphere consists of an edge region, a "visual streak" and a near mid-band region. The optical axes of many ommatidia from both hemispheres are skewed inwards towards the centrally placed mid-band and are rarely normal to the corneal surface. The large skew angle enables each hemisphere to examine an area which extensively overlaps that of the other hemisphere. As a result monocular distance judgement is possible. Most of the ommatidia in each hemisphere are part of a horizontally aligned but vertically acute "visual streak" area. There is one "visual streak" per hemisphere and both look into the same 5-10° strip. This narrow strip is also the area in space the mid-band ommatidia examine. An acute zone is present in the eyes of lysiosquilloid and gonodactyloid stomatopods and includes ommatidia, from both the hemispheres and the mid-band. Here inter-ommatidial angles, especially those in the horizontal direction, are reduced. Acute zone facets are enlarged to increase sensitivity rather than aid spatial resolution.

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