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A millipede compound eye mediating low-resolution vision

Kirwan, John D. LU and Nilsson, Dan E. LU (2019) In Vision Research 165. p.36-44
Abstract

Millipedes are a species-rich and ancient arthropod clade which typically bear a pair of lateral compound eyes with a small number of large facets. To understand the visual tasks that underlie the evolution of millipede eyes, their spatial resolving performance is of key importance. We here investigate the spatial resolution of the millipede Cylindroiulus punctatus using behavioural assays. Individual animals were placed in the centre of a cylindrical arena under bright downwelling light, with dark stimuli of varying angular dimensions placed on the arena wall. We used continuous isoluminant stimuli based on a difference of Gaussians signal to test for orientation to the dark target via object taxis. Headings of individual animals were... (More)

Millipedes are a species-rich and ancient arthropod clade which typically bear a pair of lateral compound eyes with a small number of large facets. To understand the visual tasks that underlie the evolution of millipede eyes, their spatial resolving performance is of key importance. We here investigate the spatial resolution of the millipede Cylindroiulus punctatus using behavioural assays. Individual animals were placed in the centre of a cylindrical arena under bright downwelling light, with dark stimuli of varying angular dimensions placed on the arena wall. We used continuous isoluminant stimuli based on a difference of Gaussians signal to test for orientation to the dark target via object taxis. Headings of individual animals were tracked in relation to the stimuli to determine whether the animals oriented towards the stimulus. We implemented a multilevel logistic regression model to identify the arc width of the stimulus that animals could resolve. We then modelled the angular sensitivity needed to identify this. We also related the visual performance to the 3D anatomy of the eye. We found that C. punctatus can resolve a stimulus of 56° period (sufficient to detect a 20° dark target). Assuming a contrast threshold of 10%, this requires a receptor acceptance angle of 72° or narrower. Spatial resolving power this low would only suffice for the simplest visual tasks, such as shelter-seeking.

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author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Diplopoda, Myriapoda, Photoreception, Visual acuity, Visual ecology, Visually-guided behaviour
in
Vision Research
volume
165
pages
9 pages
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • scopus:85073119756
  • pmid:31622904
ISSN
0042-6989
DOI
10.1016/j.visres.2019.09.003
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
3b0f1caf-a04a-4833-83ed-0604d6d088e7
date added to LUP
2019-10-21 10:38:31
date last changed
2024-04-30 23:14:31
@article{3b0f1caf-a04a-4833-83ed-0604d6d088e7,
  abstract     = {{<p>Millipedes are a species-rich and ancient arthropod clade which typically bear a pair of lateral compound eyes with a small number of large facets. To understand the visual tasks that underlie the evolution of millipede eyes, their spatial resolving performance is of key importance. We here investigate the spatial resolution of the millipede Cylindroiulus punctatus using behavioural assays. Individual animals were placed in the centre of a cylindrical arena under bright downwelling light, with dark stimuli of varying angular dimensions placed on the arena wall. We used continuous isoluminant stimuli based on a difference of Gaussians signal to test for orientation to the dark target via object taxis. Headings of individual animals were tracked in relation to the stimuli to determine whether the animals oriented towards the stimulus. We implemented a multilevel logistic regression model to identify the arc width of the stimulus that animals could resolve. We then modelled the angular sensitivity needed to identify this. We also related the visual performance to the 3D anatomy of the eye. We found that C. punctatus can resolve a stimulus of 56° period (sufficient to detect a 20° dark target). Assuming a contrast threshold of 10%, this requires a receptor acceptance angle of 72° or narrower. Spatial resolving power this low would only suffice for the simplest visual tasks, such as shelter-seeking.</p>}},
  author       = {{Kirwan, John D. and Nilsson, Dan E.}},
  issn         = {{0042-6989}},
  keywords     = {{Diplopoda; Myriapoda; Photoreception; Visual acuity; Visual ecology; Visually-guided behaviour}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{36--44}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Vision Research}},
  title        = {{A millipede compound eye mediating low-resolution vision}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.visres.2019.09.003}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.visres.2019.09.003}},
  volume       = {{165}},
  year         = {{2019}},
}