Chamberlain S C, Meyer-Rochow V B, Dossert W P
J Morphol. 1986 Aug;189(2):145-56. doi: 10.1002/jmor.1051890205.
The structural organization of the compound eye of the largest known isopod, Bathynomus giganteus, is described from four specimens maintained in the laboratory for as long as two months. Living specimens have not previously been available for study. The two triangular compound eyes measure about 18 mm on the dorsal edge and are separated by an interocular distance of 25 mm. They face forward and slightly downward and may have significant overlap in visual fields. Each eye contains about 3,500 ommatidia in animals of body lengths from 22.5 cm to 37.5 cm. The packing of ommatidia is not uniform across the retina, but is nearly hexagonal in the dorsal central region and nearly square in the ventral and lateral periphery. The dioptric elements in each ommatidium consist of a laminar cornea, which is flat externally and convex internally, and a bipartite crystalline cone. Sometimes seven and sometimes eight retinular cells closely appose the proximal tip of the cone and bear the microvilli of the rhabdom. Proximal to the rhabdom the retinular cells form thin pillars near the periphery of the ommatidium, and the central portion along the optic axis at this level is occupied by interstitial cells that contain massive arrays of clear vesicles thought to serve as reflective elements. The arhabdomeral segments of the retinular cells and the interstitial cells rest on a basement membrane. Within each ommatidium the basement membrane has two extensions with cylindrical cores and thin sheets of dense material and collagen-like filaments. These sheets occupy spaces between adjacent interstitial cells up to the level of the rhabdomeral segments of the retinular cells. Arrays of pigment cells with relatively weak light-screening properties separate adjacent ommatidia. Animals were fixed both in light within a week of being brought from depth into daylight, and after 2 months of maintenance in constant darkness following such daylight exposure. In both cases, microvilli of the rhabdom were severely disrupted and the retinular cytoplasm contained numerous multivesicular bodies. Exposure to natural daylight appears to cause irreversible structural damage to the photoreceptors of these animals.
对实验室中饲养长达两个月的四只巨型深海大虱(Bathynomus giganteus)标本进行了研究,描述了已知最大等足类动物复眼的结构组织。此前尚未有活体标本可用于研究。这两只三角形复眼背缘长约18毫米,两眼间距为25毫米。它们向前并略微向下,视野可能有显著重叠。体长在22.5厘米至37.5厘米的动物,每只眼睛约有3500个小眼。小眼在视网膜上的排列并不均匀,背中央区域近似六边形,腹侧和外侧周边近似正方形。每个小眼的屈光元件包括一个外部平坦、内部凸起的层状角膜和一个二分晶锥。有时七个、有时八个小网膜细胞紧密贴附在晶锥近端,并带有视杆的微绒毛。在视杆近端,小网膜细胞在小眼周边形成细柱,在这个水平沿光轴的中央部分被间质细胞占据,间质细胞含有大量被认为起反射作用的透明囊泡。小网膜细胞的非视杆段和间质细胞位于基膜上。在每个小眼中,基膜有两个带有圆柱形核心以及致密物质薄片和类胶原纤维的延伸部分。这些薄片占据相邻间质细胞之间直至小网膜细胞视杆段水平的空间。具有相对较弱遮光特性的色素细胞阵列分隔相邻小眼。动物在从深处带到日光下一周内的光照条件下固定,以及在这种日光照射后在持续黑暗中饲养2个月后固定。在这两种情况下,视杆的微绒毛都受到严重破坏,小网膜细胞质中含有大量多囊泡体。暴露于自然日光似乎会对这些动物的光感受器造成不可逆转的结构损伤。