Do Flies Have A Red Receptor?
Open Access
- 1 November 1965
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of general physiology
- Vol. 49 (2) , 265-287
- https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.49.2.265
Abstract
(1) The compound eye of Musca exhibits characteristics which have heretofore frequently been considered evidence for color receptors: (a) The spectral sensitivity curve has several peaks whose relative heights can be altered by selective adaptation to colored lights, and (b) the shape of the retinal action potential varies with wave length. (2) The action spectrum for the red enhancement of on and off responses is compared with the "red receptor" calculated by Mazokhin-Porshnyakov from colorimetric data obtained in rapid color substitutions. Both have maxima at 615 to 620 m/i and appear to be different expressions of the same phenomenon. (3) A red receptor is absent. The eivdence which suggests different types of receptors in the region 500 to 700 m/i can be accounted for by variations in the numbers of receptors stimulated. In red light there is a recruitment of additional ommatidia caused by leakage of long wave lengths through the pigment screen, and this spatial summation potentiates the on and off responses. The principal evidence is: (a) a white eye mutant which has no accessory screening pigments also lacks the peak of sensitivity in the red, even when adapted to violet light; (b) white-eyed flies give identical responses with large on and off effects at all wave lengths from 500 to 700 mU; and (c) reducing the number of excited ommatidia by decreasing the size of the test spot makes the on and off transients smaller relative to the receptor component.This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
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