EYES OF DEEP SEA CRUSTACEANS
Open Access
- 1 February 1937
- journal article
- research article
- Published by University of Chicago Press in The Biological Bulletin
- Vol. 72 (1) , 57-74
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1537540
Abstract
1. Three species of acanthephyrids have been taken in closing nets in the region of the Sargasso Sea and in slope water near the Gulf Stream in numbers sufficient so that their vertical distribution is quite accurately known. Acanthephyra purpurea and Systellaspis debilis are found mostly within the photic zone. Hymenodora glacialis inhabits a region below that to which sunlight penetrates. 2. The eyes of A. purpurea and S. debilis are quite similar structurally to the eyes of shallow-water prawns, except that there is less screening pigment. 3. Species of Systellaspis and Oplophorus possess photophores and the eyes of these forms are larger in proportion to body size than the eyes of those acanthephyrids which lack photophores. 4. The eyes of H. glacialis are quite degenerate. The rhabdomes, and both distal and proximal pigments are lacking. The reflecting pigment layer is well developed. 5. Characteristic movements of the proximal pigment of S. debilis and A. purpurea occur as the result of light adaptation.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- CRUSTACEAN EYE-STALK HORMONE AND RETINAL PIGMENT MIGRATIONThe Biological Bulletin, 1936
- FURTHER EVIDENCE OF A DIURNAL RHYTHM IN THE MOVEMENT OF PIGMENT CELLS IN EYES OF CRUSTACEANSThe Biological Bulletin, 1935
- A QUANTITATIVE STUDY OF THE VERTICAL DISTRIBUTION OF THE LARGER ZOÖPLANKTON IN DEEP WATERThe Biological Bulletin, 1935
- Degeneration of Melanophores in FundulusProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1933