Title: Compound Eyes Of
1Topic
Compound Eyes Of
2Contents
- Receptors in Insects
- Photoreception in Insects
- Compound Eyes
- Ommatidia
- Components of Ommatidia
- Photochemistry of Insect vision
- Forms of Compound Eyes
- Significance of Compound Eyes
- Color vision in SomeOrders Of Insects
- Summary
- References
3Receptors in Insects
- Mechanoreceptors
- Auditory receptors
- Stretch receptors
- Chemoreceptors
- Olfactory receptors
- Gustatory receptors
- Thermo receptors
- Photo receptors
4 Vision is the perception of light.Roles of
vision in insects
- Photoreception in Insects
5Photoreception in Insects
- Photoreceptors1. Ocelli. 2. Stemmata3.
Compound eyes
6Dorsal ocelli
- In larvae of hemimetabolous insects and in nearly
all adults. - Poor perception of form.
- Active in orientation to a light source.
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7Stemmata
- In larvae of holometabolous insects
- Do not produce clear images
- Most caterpillars can discriminate some shapes
and they can orientate themselves with respect to
boundaries.
8Compound Eyes
- Most adult insects have a single pair of compound
eyes. - Reduced or absent in parasitic forms, many soil
insects, and in some species that live in very
dark places.
9Compound Eyes and ocelli
10Facet
Hexagonal Components of Compound Eye.
11Ommatidia
- Basic unit of compound eyes
- Vary in size and number.
- Honey bee has 4900 Ommatidia in Queen, 6300 in
workers and 13000 in donors. - Pomera punctatissima have only one ommatidium
in each eye. - The sizes of Ommatidia vary from about
- 5 to 40 microns in diameter .
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12Components of Ommatidia
- Optical parts
- 1. Corneal lens
- 2. Crystalline cone
- Sensory parts
- 1. Retinula cells
- 2. Rhabdom
- A nerve axon projects
- from each retinula cell.
- Optic nerve
- (YADAV. M)
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13Compound Eyes and Brain
14Photochemistry of Insect vision
- Photons are caught on the rhabdome by retinal.
- Retinal is connected to opsin, forming
rhodopsin. - On absorption of photon, retinal changes its form
from bent to straight. - When retinal changes its form, it separates from
the rhodopsin and the opsin triggers a nerve
cell. - The nerve cells conduct the signal to the brain.
15Forms of Compound Eyes
- Apposition eyes
- 2. Superposition eyes.
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17Significance of Compound Eyes
- Flicker effect
- The compound eye is excellent at detecting
motion. - As an object moves, ommatidia are turned on
and off. -
18Significance of Compound Eyes
- 2. Distance Perception
- Most insects must be able to judge distance.
- As in prey catching insects, in Grass hoppers
jumping, and when they are landing. - Simultaneous stimulation of ommatidia.
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19Colors
20Significance of Compound Eyes
- 3. Color vision
- Some insects are able to distinguish colors
- Most flower visiting insects exhibit
preferences for blue and yellow. - Important in feeding and in court ship behavior
-
213. Color vision
- Bichromatic Insects.
- One pigment absorbs green and yellow light (550
nm) the other absorbs blue and ultraviolet light
(lt480 nm). - Trichromatic Insects.
- Absorption maxima at 360 nm (UV), 440 nm
(blue-violet), and 588 nm (yellow)
22Human Vision Vs. Insect Sight
- Colors visible to insects is higher in frequency
(lower in wave length) - Violet light is the highest frequency of color
humans can detect, but many insects can see a
higher frequency of light invisible to us,
ultraviolet light.
23Ultraviolet vision
24Color vision in SomeOrders Of Insects
251. Vision in Order Hymenoptera
- Eastern honey bee (Apis cerana).
- Family Apidae
- The bees are red-blind.
- orange, yellow, and green are the same color
yellow. - Sensitive to UV light.
- They see blue colors best.
- Sense of polarization of visible light in the sky.
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262. Vision in Order Odonata
- Dragonfly(C. aenea) or Downy emerald
- Family Corduliidae
- Compound eyes with wide-angle vision
- Their eyes do not move.
- 30,000 eye ommatidia
- Orange to ultraviolet (UV) light.
- Able to estimate distance based on the
- distance between their eyes.
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273. Vision in Order Diptera
- House flies (Musca domestica)
- Family Muscidae
- The vision of the housefly is blurred
- Compound apposition eyes
- Can sense rapid motion approaching 200
- cycles per second.
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28Vision in Mosquito
- Mosquito (Culiseta longiareolata)
- Family Culicidae
- Mosquitoes are attracted to black and to dark
colors. (Howlett 1910) - Prefer the corners of a three-dimensional target.
(Brown Bennett)
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294. Vision in Order Coleoptera
- Beetle (Tetraopes tetrophthalmus)
- Family Cerambycidae
- Have infrared detection systems
- for night vision, fire detection, and other
functions as to sense forest fires. - Beetles have refraction superposition eyes
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305. Vision in Order Blattaria
- American cockroach (Periplaneta americana),
- Family Blattidae
- 2000 individual lenses
- Has receptors for UV light and green light.
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316. Vision in Order Homoptera AphidsSuper
family Aphidoidea Contains green, blue, and
ultraviolet photoreceptors
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327. Vision in Order Lepidoptera
- Butterfly(Papilio rutulus)
- Family Papilionidae
- Can See simultaneously in every direction.
- Trichromatic vision
- It can distinguish night from the day
- Can perceive colors in a high frequency
- (from 310 nm to 700)
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33Vision in Order Lepidoptera
- Gipsy Moth (Lymantria dispar).
- Family Lymantriidae
- Can see in the back of their heads.
- Neural summation
- Have three types blue, green, and ultraviolet.
- Ultraviolet light reflection.
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34Summary
35References
- YADAV. M, "Physiology of Insects," Discovery
Publishing House New Delhi-110002, pp. 322-345 - http//entomology.unl.edu/ent801/ent801home.html
- http//users.rcn.com/jkimball.ma.ultranet/BiologyP
ages/C/CompoundEye.html - www.cals.ncsu.edu/course/ent425/tutorial/colorvisi
on.html - http//www.sewanee.edu/Chem/ChemArt/Detail_Pages/
ColorProjects_2003/Crone - www.eyedesignbook.com/index.html
- http//www.ent.iastate.edu/dept/research/vandyk/ho
stseek.htm
36References
- 8.http//www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/1
71/3977/1254 - 9.http//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1945
073/figure/pbio-0050187-g003 - 10. http//www.butterflyzone.org/butterfly-article
s/butterfly-uv-vision.shtml - 11.http//indianapublicmedia.org/amomentofscience/
insect-color-vision - 12.http//www.animalcorner.co.uk/insects/moths/mot
h.html
37Thank You Very Much
Good listeners make Good Speakers
38Dedicated To Dr. Sumera Afsheen