ABSTRACT
Stomatopods, or mantis shrimp, are the only animal group known to possess circular polarization vision along with linear polarization vision. By using the rhabdomere of a distally located photoreceptor as a wave retarder, the eyes of mantis shrimp are able to convert circularly polarized light into linearly polarized light. As a result, their circular polarization vision is based on the linearly polarized light-sensitive photoreceptors commonly found in many arthropods. To investigate how linearly and circularly polarized light signals might be processed, we presented a dynamic polarized light stimulus while recording from photoreceptors or lamina neurons in intact mantis shrimp Haptosquilla pulchella. The results indicate that all the circularly polarized light-sensitive photoreceptors also showed differential responses to the changing e-vector angle of linearly polarized light. When stimulated with linearly polarized light of varying e-vector angle, most photoreceptors produced a concordant sinusoidal response. In contrast, some lamina neurons doubled the response frequency in reacting to linearly polarized light. These responses resembled a rectified sum of two-channel linear polarization-sensitive photoreceptors, indicating that polarization visual signals are processed at or before the first optic lobe. Noticeably, within the lamina, there was one type of neuron that showed a steady depolarization response to all stimuli except right-handed circularly polarized light. Together, our findings suggest that, between the photoreceptors and lamina neurons, linearly and circularly polarized light may be processed in parallel and differently from one another.
Footnotes
Competing interests
The authors declare no competing or financial interests.
Author contributions
Conceptualization: T.-H.C.; Methodology: T.-H.C.; Software: T.-H.C.; Validation: T.-H.C.; Formal analysis: C.-W.W.; Investigation: C.-W.W.; Resources: T.-H.C.; Data curation: C.-W.W.; Writing - original draft: T.-H.C.; Writing - review & editing: C.-W.W.; Visualization: C.-W.W.; Supervision: T.-H.C.; Project administration: T.-H.C.; Funding acquisition: T.-H.C.
Funding
The funding of this research was provided, in part, by a Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan grant to T.-H.C. (MOST 102-2311-B006-002-MY3), and by the Ministry of Education, Taiwan, ROC Headquarters of University Advancement to the National Cheng Kung University (NCKU).
- Received December 6, 2019.
- Accepted October 16, 2020.
- © 2020. Published by The Company of Biologists Ltd
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