Structure And Development of the Compound Eye of the Honey Bee

Cover Structure And Development of the Compound Eye of the Honey Bee
Structure And Development of the Compound Eye of the Honey Bee
Everett Franklin Phillips
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a. The Retinula. The retinula cells are eight in number normally, but numerous ommatidia are observed in which nine cells are present. In the earliest pupa stage (fig. 3) these cells extend from the proximal end (apex) of the cone cells to the basement membrane, and each cell has a protoplasmic process extending through the openings in the base- ment membrane toward the optic lobes, which later functions as the nervous connection of these cells with the cells of the retinular ganglion. At this
...time the only indication of the rhabdome is the clear space at the distal end which was described for the larval ommatidium; its differentiation has gone on little, if any, during the rearrangement of cells. The cytoplasm at the distal end of the cells is more granular than elsewhere, and by the time the eye has reached the stage figured pigment is laid down around the forming rhabdome. This is the first pigment laid down in the ommatidium, but at almost the same time 1905. ] NATURAL SCIENCES OF PHILADELPHIA.

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