Diel variation of visual response in Talitrus saltator and Talorchestia deshayesii (Crustacea : Amphipoda) from high latitude beaches of low tidal amplitude
M. Nardi et al., Diel variation of visual response in Talitrus saltator and Talorchestia deshayesii (Crustacea : Amphipoda) from high latitude beaches of low tidal amplitude, EST COAST S, 50(3), 2000, pp. 333-340
The responses to a white directional light and a black stripe covering 60 d
egrees of the horizon were studied in two Swedish populations of the amphip
od species Talitrus saltator (Montagu, 1808) and Talorchesia deshayesii (Au
doin, 1826) from two beaches on the southern Baltic Sea. Adult individuals
were caught in the field and tested in constant laboratory conditions in or
der to investigate the possible variation of the responses during the 24 h
cycle, and then to compare their behaviour with that of the Atlantic and Me
diterranean populations, already known in literature. Previous studies expl
ained the observed differences between Atlantic and Mediterranean populatio
ns with the differences in tidal excursions and did not take into account t
he different climatic conditions. The Baltic coasts, like those of the Ital
ian Mediterranean, are not tidal and present prevalent low mean temperature
s and high humidity throughout the year like those of Britain. The response
to the artificial white light remained photopositive throughout the 24 h c
ycle in both the species sampled, although its intensity was lower during t
he day than at night in Talitrus saltator. The response to the black stripe
showed an inversion from positive to negative during the 24 h cycle, the a
nimals being directed towards the black stripe during the day and away from
it at night; this response was more intense and clear cut in Talorchestia
deshayesii than in Talitrus saltator. The pattern of response to the black
stripe shown by the Swedish talitrids, differed from both that of the Briti
sh and Italian populations, and was interpreted as a basic response related
to the diel rhythm of emergence and burrowing. (C) 2000 Academic Press.