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Biol. Bull. 211: 140-148. (October 2006)
© 2006 Marine Biological Laboratory

Visual Physiology of the Antarctic Amphipod Abyssorchomene plebs

Jonathan H. Cohen* and Tamara M. Frank

Department of Visual Ecology, Division of Marine Science, Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institution, 5600 US 1 North, Fort Pierce, Florida 34946

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: jcohen{at}hboi.edu

Although the visual systems of animals living in the cold, dark water of the deep sea have been investigated for some time, little is known about vision in animals inhabiting polar oceans, where temperatures are even colder and irradiance fluctuates dramatically with ice cover and season. Physiology of the compound eye of the amphipod Abyssorchomene plebs (Gammaridea: Lysianassoidea), a common Antarctic benthic scavenger, was studied electrophysiologically by electroretinography. A. plebs has a monochromatic visual system with a spectral sensitivity maximum at 487 nm, and higher sensitivity at ultraviolet wavelengths than predicted by a visual pigment template. While irradiance sensitivity determined from V/log I curves is comparable to that of mesopelagic crustaceans, temporal resolution calculated from response waveform dynamics and as determined by critical flicker fusion frequency suggest that the A. plebs eye is slower than that of crustaceans from the deep sea. A. plebs photoreceptors are physiologically adapted for a slow lifestyle in a low-light environment, where maximizing photon capture occurs at the expense of detecting fast events in the visual scene.

Abbreviations: CFF, critical flicker fusion frequency • ERG, electroretinogram • UV, ultraviolet







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