RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN PUPIL WORKING RANGE AND HABITAT LUMINANCE IN FLIES AND BUTTERFLIES

Citation
Acj. Jonson et al., RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN PUPIL WORKING RANGE AND HABITAT LUMINANCE IN FLIES AND BUTTERFLIES, Journal of comparative physiology. A, Sensory, neural, and behavioral physiology, 182(1), 1998, pp. 1-9
Citations number
38
Categorie Soggetti
Physiology,Neurosciences,"Behavioral Sciences",Zoology
ISSN journal
03407594
Volume
182
Issue
1
Year of publication
1998
Pages
1 - 9
Database
ISI
SICI code
0340-7594(1998)182:1<1:RBPWRA>2.0.ZU;2-S
Abstract
The luminance range over which the pupil mechanism operates was measur ed with pupil reflectometry in 11 species of butterflies and 13 specie s of dipteran flies. The different species were selected to be as diff erent as possible regarding the range of ambient luminances in which t hey are active. Habitat luminance ranges were also measured and correl ated to luminances in the experimental situation. The pupil mechanism in butterflies operates in the centre of the luminance range in which the different species are active. Three distinct groups of butterflies with pupil sensitivities matched to their specific types of activity pattern were identified: species active only in direct sunlight, speci es active also in shaded places and species extending their activity i nto dawn and dusk. Quite differently, the pupil mechanisms of dipteran flies operate in the upper end of the ambient luminances, and in some species well above the luminances normally encountered by the animal. All fly pupils start to close roughly at the same luminance, irrespec tive of the luminances in which the species are active. The results su ggest that the most important role for the pupil mechanism in many of the butterfly species is to maximize acuity over a wide range of lumin ances, whereas in flies it is to avoid saturation of transduction unit s and thereby maximize the photoreceptor's signal-to-noise ratio at hi gh light intensities.