2012
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0030474
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Wiring a Periscope – Ocelli, Retinula Axons, Visual Neuropils and the Ancestrality of Sea Spiders

Abstract: The Pycnogonida or sea spiders are cryptic, eight-legged arthropods with four median ocelli in a ‘periscope’ or eye tubercle. In older attempts at reconstructing phylogeny they were Arthropoda incertae sedis, but recent molecular trees placed them as the sister group either to all other euchelicerates or even to all euarthropods. Thus, pycnogonids are among the oldest extant arthropods and hold a key position for the understanding of arthropod evolution. This has stimulated studies of new sets of characters co… Show more

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Cited by 23 publications
(48 citation statements)
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“…Many publications and modern glossaries confuse eyes of visual systems, as defined above, with light sensitive channels subtending lenses, but which do not supply retinotopic neuropils. The lenses of Onychophora (Strausfeld et al, 2006), the paired median lenses of xiphosurans , single lenslets of Chilopoda , and the lenses of Chelicerata, including Pycnogonida, all supply light to photoreceptor neurons that connect to retinotopic neurons comprising discrete visual neuropils belonging to the protocerebral neuromere of the brain (Strausfeld et al, 2006;Harzsch et al, 2006;Strausfeld, 2012;Lehmann et al, 2012;Lehmann and Melzer, 2013). In contrast, the nauplius eyes of crustaceans and the ocelli of insects, their likely homologues, supply sparse outputs to distributed areas in the central protocerebrum but not to specialized visual neuropils (N€ assel and Hagberg, 1985;Lacalli, 2009;Fritsch and Richter, 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many publications and modern glossaries confuse eyes of visual systems, as defined above, with light sensitive channels subtending lenses, but which do not supply retinotopic neuropils. The lenses of Onychophora (Strausfeld et al, 2006), the paired median lenses of xiphosurans , single lenslets of Chilopoda , and the lenses of Chelicerata, including Pycnogonida, all supply light to photoreceptor neurons that connect to retinotopic neurons comprising discrete visual neuropils belonging to the protocerebral neuromere of the brain (Strausfeld et al, 2006;Harzsch et al, 2006;Strausfeld, 2012;Lehmann et al, 2012;Lehmann and Melzer, 2013). In contrast, the nauplius eyes of crustaceans and the ocelli of insects, their likely homologues, supply sparse outputs to distributed areas in the central protocerebrum but not to specialized visual neuropils (N€ assel and Hagberg, 1985;Lacalli, 2009;Fritsch and Richter, 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this region, groups of axons are just interwoven with their neighbours. Hence, a primitive form of retinotopic projection arrangement of these nerve bundles occurs, resembling that in Pycnogonida [14]. All nerve fibres from the eye are bundled and a re-assortment of the single axons takes place.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Besides Opiliones, the basal Pycnogonida and Solifugae possess only median eyes, and Pseudoscorpiones possess only lateral eyes. However, examined in detail are only the visual systems of Pycnogonida, Xiphosura ( Limulus ), Scorpiones, and Araneae [1424, 31]. Concerning the R-cell projections and neuropil arrangement, two different configurations have been described, with Pycnogonida, Xiphosura, and Scorpiones on the one side and Araneae on the other.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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