Abstract

We investigated the eye regionalization in Talitrus saltator by morphological, electrophysiological and behavioural experiments. Each ommatidium possesses five radially arranged retinular cells producing a square fused rhabdom by R1-R4 cells; the smaller R5 exists between R1 and R4. The size of R5 rhabdomere is larger in the dorsal part and becomes smaller in the median and ventral parts of the eye. Spectral-sensitivity by electroretinograms were recorded from dorsal or ventral parts of the eye. The dorsal part possesses maxima at green and UV-blue region. The main response region in the ventral part is only from UV (390nm) to blue (430nm) decreasing at longer wavelengths. To evaluate the sandhoppers' celestial orientation, their eyes were painted black either in the dorsal or ventral part, under the natural sky or a blue filter with or without the vision of the sun. Sandhoppers with the dorsal region of the eyes painted and tested under the screened sun were more dispersed and their directions varied more than in other groups of individuals. Sandhoppers with this area of the eye obscured display considerable difficulties to head in a specific direction. This work suggests the existence of regional specializations in the eye of T. saltator.

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