SUMMARY
Given the great range of visual systems, tasks and habitats, there is surprisingly little experimental evidence of how visual limitations affect behavioural strategies under natural conditions. Analysing this relationship will require an experimental system that allows for the synchronous measurement of visual cues and visually guided behaviour. The first step in quantifying visual cues from an animal's perspective is to understand the filter properties of its visual system. We examined the first stage of visual processing – sampling by the ommatidial array – in the compound eye of the fiddler crab Uca vomeris. Using an in vivo pseudopupil method we determined sizes and viewing directions of ommatidia and created a complete eye map of optical and sampling resolution across the visual field. Our results reveal five distinct eye regions (ventral, dorsal, frontal, lateral and medial) which exhibit clear differences in the organisation of the local sampling array, in particular with respect to the balance of resolution and contrast sensitivity. We argue that, under global eye space constraints, these regional optimisations reflect the information content and behavioural relevance of the corresponding parts of the visual field. In demonstrating the tight link between visual sampling, visual cues and behavioural strategies, our analysis highlights how the study of natural behaviour and natural stimuli is essential to our understanding and interpretation of the evolution and ecology of animal behaviour and the design of sensory systems.
FOOTNOTES
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We thank Jochen Zeil for access to the goniometer microscope and for his invaluable help during the study, and Eric Warrant for inspiring discussions about this work. We are also grateful to Martin How, Ajay Narendra, Tobias Merkle, Wiebke Ebeling, Pinar Letzkus, Amir Mohammadi, Mario Pahl, Shaun New and Marianne Peso for their help during the course of the study and their constructive comments on earlier versions of this manuscript. We would also like to acknowledge the two anonymous reviewers, whose encouraging comments helped to improve this article. J.S. was funded through a Heinz-Dürr Scholarship from the German National Academic Foundation (Studienstiftung des deutschen Volkes) and the Zeiss Foundation, an Australian National University PhD scholarship and an International Postgraduate Research Scholarship. Additional funding was provided by the ARC Centre of Excellence in Vision Science and the Centre for Visual Sciences.