Barnatan Yair, Tomsic Daniel, Sztarker Julieta
Instituto de Fisiología, Biología Molecular y Neurociencias (IFIBYNE) CONICET, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Departamento de Fisiología, Biología Molecular y Celular Dr. Héctor Maldonado, Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Front Physiol. 2019 May 16;10:586. doi: 10.3389/fphys.2019.00586. eCollection 2019.
Animals, from invertebrates to humans, stabilize the panoramic optic flow through compensatory movements of the eyes, the head or the whole body, a behavior known as optomotor response (OR). The same optic flow moved clockwise or anticlockwise elicits equivalent compensatory right or left turning movements, respectively. However, if stimulated monocularly, many animals show a unique effective direction of motion, i.e., a unidirectional OR. This phenomenon has been reported in various species from mammals to birds, reptiles, and amphibious, but among invertebrates, it has only been tested in flies, where the directional sensitivity is opposite to that found in vertebrates. Although OR has been extensively investigated in crabs, directional sensitivity has never been analyzed. Here, we present results of behavioral experiments aimed at exploring the directional sensitivity of the OR in two crab species belonging to different families: the varunid mud crab and the ocypode fiddler crab . By using different conditions of visual perception (binocular, left or right monocular) and direction of flow field motion (clockwise, anticlockwise), we found in both species that in monocular conditions, OR is effectively displayed only with progressive (front-to-back) motion stimulation. Binocularly elicited responses were directional insensitive and significantly weaker than monocular responses. These results are coincident with those described in flies and suggest a commonality in the circuit underlying this behavior among arthropods. Additionally, we found the existence of a remarkable eye dominance for the OR, which is associated to the size of the larger claw. This is more evident in the fiddler crab where the difference between the two claws is huge.
从无脊椎动物到人类,动物通过眼睛、头部或整个身体的代偿性运动来稳定全景视觉流,这种行为被称为视动反应(OR)。相同的视觉流顺时针或逆时针移动分别引发等效的代偿性右转或左转运动。然而,如果单眼受到刺激,许多动物会表现出独特的有效运动方向,即单向视动反应。这种现象在从哺乳动物到鸟类、爬行动物和两栖动物的各种物种中都有报道,但在无脊椎动物中,仅在果蝇中进行过测试,其方向敏感性与脊椎动物中发现的相反。尽管在螃蟹中对视动反应进行了广泛研究,但从未分析过方向敏感性。在这里,我们展示了行为实验的结果,旨在探索属于不同科的两种螃蟹——方蟹科泥蟹和招潮蟹科招潮蟹——的视动反应的方向敏感性。通过使用不同的视觉感知条件(双眼、左单眼或右单眼)和流场运动方向(顺时针、逆时针),我们在这两个物种中都发现,在单眼条件下,视动反应仅在渐进性(从前到后)运动刺激下有效显示。双眼引发的反应对方向不敏感,且明显弱于单眼反应。这些结果与果蝇中描述的结果一致,并表明节肢动物中这种行为背后的神经回路具有共性。此外,我们发现视动反应存在明显的眼优势,这与较大螯的大小有关。这在招潮蟹中更为明显,其两只螯之间的差异巨大。