Maturation of optics and resolution in adult dung beetle superpostion eyes
1990
Warrant, E.J. | McIntyre, P.D. | Caveney, S.
The maturation of the morphology and refractive-index gradients of the crystalline cones and cornea of the superposition compound eye of the nocturnal dung beetle Onitis aygulus was traced as a function of age following adult ecdysis. Intracellular recordings from retinula cells were also made to trace the maturation of angular sensitivity, thereby determining the resolution of the eye at each age. Maturation proceeded quickly during the first 3 days following ecdysis, and then more slowly, with full maturation attained by the end of the second week. The main experimental results obtained during the first 2 weeks after ecdysis were: (1) the mean length of the crystalline cones increases from 67 micrometer to 79 micrometer; (2) the mean thickness of the cornea increases from 36 micrometer to 50 micrometer; (3) the mean refractive index along the axis of the crystalline cones increases from 1.459 to 1.511 in the distal cone region, from 1.434 to 1.501 in the waist region and from 1.425 to 1.486 in the proximal region; (4) the shape of the refractive-index gradient becomes more parabolic; (5) the mean rhabdom cross-sectional area increases from 190 micrometer2 to 230 micrometer2; (6) the angular-sensitivity function narrows, with the acceptance angle decreasing from 22 degrees to 4 degrees. An optical ray tracing model predicts an image quality limited only by the immaturity of the optics, a prediction confirmed by the electrophysiological results. The results are compared to optical maturation in day-active moths and skipper butterflies (which mature very quickly) and discussed in relation to ecological efficiency.
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