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Journal of Experimental Biology 37,376-389 (1960)
Published by Company of Biologists 1960


The Shadow Reaction of Diadema Antillarum Philippi : II. Inhibition by Light

N. MILLOTT 1 and M. YOSHIDA 2

1 Department of Zoology, Bedford College, University of London
2 Department of Zoology, Bedford College, University of London; The Marine Laboratory, Shibukawa, Tamano City, Okayama, Japan

1. Light is shown to suppress the shadow reactions of Diadema spines to a degree which varies with its intensity.

2. Inhibition can occur when there is spatial separation between the areas shaded and illuminated in the radial nerve and skin.

3. The degree of inhibition is affected by the position and size of the area lighted. In both skin and radial nerves, uniform meridional gradients of inhibition are found, inhibition being maximal when the areas lighted and shaded are near or coincide, decreasing as these areas are moved apart. The effect of light may be reversed when it is projected at more than a critical distance from the shadow. Gradients in the skin which run parallel to the ambitus, show maximal inhibition at the ambulacral margins, so that the inhibitory gradient corresponds with that of sensitivity to shadows.

4. Interaction between excitation and inhibition may occur in the radial nerve or at the periphery and there are several pathways for excitation and inhibition.

5. The findings are discussed in relation to ‘off’ effects and receptor fields in retinae.

Submitted on December 21, 1959







© The Company of Biologists Ltd 1960