The Ultraviolet Receptor if Bird Retinas
- 20 July 1984
- journal article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 225 (4659) , 337-340
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.6740315
Abstract
The eyes of 15 species of birds from 10 families have some cones maximally sensitive at 370 nanometers in the near-ultraviolet. Spectral sensitivity was measured by recording extracellularly in opened eyecups , and a maximum in the ultraviolet was revealed by selectively adapting the retina with yellow background lights. The 370-nanometer spectral sensitivity function is attributed to receptors because its spectral position does not vary with the strength of adaptation and because it is present when the receptor potentials are isolated from the contributions of higher order retinal neurons by exposing the retina to sodium aspartate. These measurements demonstrate the basis for the ultraviolet sensitivity of birds that has been seen in behavioral experiments, and they provide further evidence that many vertebrates share with insects vision in the near-ultraviolet.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Appearance of a Purkinje shift in the developing retina of the chickJournal of Experimental Zoology, 1984
- Ultraviolet Visual Pigment in a Vertebrate: A Tetrachromatic Cone System in the DaceScience, 1983
- Hummingbirds See Near Ultraviolet LightScience, 1980
- The contribution of a sensitizing pigment to the photosensitivity spectra of fly rhodopsin and metarhodopsin.The Journal of general physiology, 1979
- Ultraviolet light detection by the homing pigeonNature, 1978
- Evidence for a sensitising pigment in fly photoreceptorsNature, 1977
- Adaptation in Skate PhotoreceptorsThe Journal of general physiology, 1972
- Ultraviolet Video-Viewing: The Television Camera as an Insect EveScience, 1969
- Trichromatic vision in the pigeon as illustrated by the spectral hue discrimination curve.Journal of Comparative Psychology, 1933
- APPARENTLY NON‐SELECTIVE CHARACTERS AND COMBINATIONS OF CHARACTERS, INCLUDING A STUDY OF ULTRAVIOLET IN RELATION TO THE FLOWER‐VISITING HABITS OF INSECTSAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1920