1. Catfish (Ictalurus punctatus) retinal cone horizontal cells contain an L-type calcium current that has been proposed to be involved in visual processing. Here we report on the modulation of this current by activation of glutamate receptors and calcium-induced calcium release (CICR) from intracellular calcium stores. 2. Fluorescence data obtained from isolated horizontal cells loaded with indo-1 provided evidence of calcium release from an intracellular calcium store sensitive to caffeine, calcium and ryanodine. In the presence of caffeine, ryanodine-sensitive stores released calcium in a transient manner. Release of calcium was blocked when cells were preincubated in BAPTA, in the presence of ruthenium red, or in low concentrations of ryanodine. 3. The release of calcium from ryanodine-sensitive stores directly corresponded with a decrease of the voltage-gated L-type calcium current amplitude. Caffeine-induced modulation of the calcium current was reduced in the presence of ruthenium red. 4. Activation of ionotropic kainate receptors on catfish cone horizontal cells triggered CICR from ryanodine-sensitive stores and mimicked inhibition of the voltage-gated calcium current. Kainate-induced inhibition of the calcium current was diminished when intracellular calcium stores were inhibited with ruthenium red or depleted with ryanodine, or when calmodulin antagonists or CaM kinase II inhibitors were present. 5. These results provide evidence that activation of an ionotropic glutamate receptor on catfish cone horizontal cells is linked to calcium release from ryanodine-sensitive intracellular calcium stores and modulation of the L-type calcium current activity. Inhibition of this calcium current directly or indirectly involves calmodulin and CaM kinase II and represents a possible mechanism used by horizontal cells to affect response properties of these cells.