PHOTOTAXIS IN DICTYOSTELIUM DISCOIDEUM AMOEBAE

Abstract
Abstract— An apparatus has been developed to measure phototactic movement in a population of amoebae of Dictyostelium discoideum. Fluence–response curves in white light show a positive phototaxis to light below 100mW/m2. Higher intensities cause a negative phototaxis. An action spectrum, based on the zero‐crossing points in fluence–response curves for monochromatic light, shows a major peak at about 405nm and secondary maxima at about 450, 520, 580 and 640nm. This action spectrum resembles the action spectra for accumulations of amoebae in and dispersal from light traps and that of inhibition of aggregation by light, but is distinctly different from the action spectrum for phototaxis by D. discoideum pseudoplasmodia.