TY - JOUR
T1 - Neural organization of first optic neuropils in the littoral crab Hemigrapsus oregonensis and the semiterrestrial species Chasmagnathus granulatus
AU - Sztarker, Julieta
AU - Strausfeld, Nicholas
AU - Andrew, David
AU - Tomsic, Daniel
PY - 2009
Y1 - 2009
N2 - Crustaceans are among the most extensively distributed arthropods, occupying many ecologies and manifesting a great variety of compound eye optics; but in comparison with insects, relatively little is known about the organization and neuronal morphologies of their underlying optic neuropils. Most studies, which have been limited to descriptions of the first neuropil-the lamina-suggest that different species have approximately comparable cell types, However, such studies have been limited with regard to the types of neurons they identify and most omit their topographic relationships. It is also uncertain whether similarities, such as they are, are independent of visual ecologies. The present account describes and compares the morphologies and dispositions of monopolar and other efferent neurons as well as the organization of tangential and smaller centrifugal neurons in two grapsoid crabs, one from the South Atlantic, the other from the North Pacific. Because these species occupy significantly disparate ecologies we ask whether this might be reflected in differences of cell arrangements within the most peripheral levels of the visual system. The present study identifies such differences with respect to the organization of centrifugal neurons to the lamina. We also identify in both species neurons in the lamina that have hitherto not been identified in crustaceans and we draw specific comparisons between the layered organization of the grapsoid lamina and layered laminas of insects.
AB - Crustaceans are among the most extensively distributed arthropods, occupying many ecologies and manifesting a great variety of compound eye optics; but in comparison with insects, relatively little is known about the organization and neuronal morphologies of their underlying optic neuropils. Most studies, which have been limited to descriptions of the first neuropil-the lamina-suggest that different species have approximately comparable cell types, However, such studies have been limited with regard to the types of neurons they identify and most omit their topographic relationships. It is also uncertain whether similarities, such as they are, are independent of visual ecologies. The present account describes and compares the morphologies and dispositions of monopolar and other efferent neurons as well as the organization of tangential and smaller centrifugal neurons in two grapsoid crabs, one from the South Atlantic, the other from the North Pacific. Because these species occupy significantly disparate ecologies we ask whether this might be reflected in differences of cell arrangements within the most peripheral levels of the visual system. The present study identifies such differences with respect to the organization of centrifugal neurons to the lamina. We also identify in both species neurons in the lamina that have hitherto not been identified in crustaceans and we draw specific comparisons between the layered organization of the grapsoid lamina and layered laminas of insects.
KW - Ecological constraints
KW - Eumalacostraca
KW - Evolution
KW - Visual processing
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=64049096406&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=64049096406&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/cne.21942
DO - 10.1002/cne.21942
M3 - Article
C2 - 19123235
AN - SCOPUS:64049096406
SN - 0021-9967
VL - 513
SP - 129
EP - 150
JO - Journal of Comparative Neurology
JF - Journal of Comparative Neurology
IS - 2
ER -