Abstract

ABSTRACT The number and size of the vacuoles in the retinal clubs of the eye of Dendrocoelum lacteum increase considerably in animals kept in darkness. As a consequence, the volume of the whole retinal club enlarges, the microvilli forming its marginal zone becoming shorter and thicker. When exposed to light, the retinal clubs regain their original structure; the number and size of the vacuoles diminish and the zone of the microvilli widens. These structural changes are interpreted as due to a photosensitive substance which is produced in the axial cytoplasm of the club, stored in vacuoles and disintegrated by light in the zone of the microvilli.

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