A LINEAR AREA CENTRALIS EXTENDING ACROSS TURTLE RETINA AND STABILIZED TO HORIZON BY NON-VISUAL CUES

被引:60
作者
BROWN, KT
机构
[1] Department of Physiology, University of California Medical Center, San Francisco
关键词
D O I
10.1016/0042-6989(69)90047-9
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
A common fresh-water turtle (Pseudemys scripta elegans) is shown to have a linear area centralis extending horizontally almost all the way across the retina. Within this line the receptors are small and densely concentrated, as demonstrated by using the colored oil droplets to visualize the receptor mosaic in isolated inverted retinas. Below this line the increase of receptor size occurs more gradually than above the line. In the central portion of the line, there is an expansion of the high-density receptor area into the lower half of the retina. In a fresh eyecup the linear area centralis may be seen as a distinct red line that is parallel to a black line across the iris. During limited rotation of the turtle around its lateral or longitudinal axis, the black iris line (and hence the area centralis) is stabilized in the plane of the animal's horizon by reflexive head and eye movements, which occur without visual cues and hence are presumably under vestibular control. This linear type of area centralis, which is stabilized to the horizon, appears to be highly functional specialization for an animal living close to the earth's surface, for which the bulk of relevant visual stimuli must originate at or near the horizon. © 1969.
引用
收藏
页码:1053 / &
相关论文
共 10 条
[1]  
CARR A, 1952, HANDBOOK TURTLES
[2]   VISUAL FIELD PROJECTION ON DORSAL NUCLEUS OF LATERAL GENICULATE BODY IN RABBIT [J].
CHOUDHURY, BP ;
WHITTERIDGE, D .
QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PHYSIOLOGY AND COGNATE MEDICAL SCIENCES, 1965, 50 (01) :104-+
[3]  
Davis FA., 1929, T AM OPHTHAL SOC, V27, P401
[4]  
GILLETT WG, 1923, AM J OPHTHALMOL, V6, P955
[5]   Contributions to the comparative anatomy of the mammalian eye, chiefly based on ophthalmoscopic examination [J].
Johnson, GL .
PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF LONDON SERIES B-CONTAINING PAPERS OF A BIOLOGICAL CHARACTER, 1901, 194 :1-U62
[6]  
NORTH S, 1967, RACCOONS BRIGHTEST P
[7]  
Polyak S, 1957, VERTEBRATE VISUAL SY
[9]  
WALLS GL, 1942, VERTEBRATE EYE ADAPT
[10]  
Wood C., 1917, FUNDUS OCULI BIRDS