Abstract
The physical origin of the color patterns in the eyes of Tabanidae is well understood: a stack of layers in the facet lenses acts as an interference reflectance filter (Bernard & Miller 1968). This causes a reduced transmittance in specific wavelength bands. Because a facet lens focuses light into the underlying rhabdomeres, where the visual pigment molecules can absorb the incident light, the spectrally affected transmittance presumably causes a modified spectral sensitivity of the photoreceptors. We have investigated this conjecture by measuring reflectance spectra from the golden-greenish shining facets of the blinding breeze fly Chrysops relictus. By combining the associated transmittance spectrum with various visual pigment spectra, we conclude that noticeable shifts in photoreceptor sensitivity spectra can only occur with visual pigments that have absorption spectra peaking around 540 nm, i.e. in the green, in accordance with ERG measurements of the related horsefly Haematopota pluvialis (Kirschfeld 1986).
Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | PROCEEDINGS OF THE SECTION EXPERIMENTAL AND APPLIED ENTOMOLOGY OF THE NETHERLANDS ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY(N.E.V.), VOL 11, 1999 |
Place of Publication | 1018 DH AMSTERDAM |
Publisher | NEDERLANDSE ENTOMOLOGISCHE VERNIGING ( N E V ) |
Pages | 61-66 |
Number of pages | 6 |
ISBN (Print) | 90-71912-20-5 |
Publication status | Published - 1999 |
Event | 11th Meeting of Experimental and Applied Entomologists in the Netherlands - , Netherlands Duration: 17-Dec-1999 → … |
Other
Other | 11th Meeting of Experimental and Applied Entomologists in the Netherlands |
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Country/Territory | Netherlands |
Period | 17/12/1999 → … |
Keywords
- fly eye
- spectral sensitivity
- vision
- interference colors
- horsefly