BI110 Chapter Notes - Chapter Module 83: Ommatidium, Amacrine Cell, Opsin

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A: the part of the electromagnetic spectrum our human eyes can see. A: bees- allows them to see patterns on flowers invisible to humans. A: they have a layer at the back of their eye that reflects light and enables them to see in the dark. A: the process by which light-sensitive cells detect photons of light. A: specialized receptor cells containing light-sensitive pigment that detects and changes shape when they are struck by a photon of light, which triggers a neural response. A: an eyespot - contains photoreceptors that can distinguish light from dark. A: an eye composed of hundreds to thousands of individual light detectors called ommatidia, each with its own lens that focuses light; found in arthropods and some annelid worms, insects, crustations. They are excellent in detecting motion, but cannot focus images. A: a simple eye containing only one lens. An example is the vertebrate - mollusks, worms, jellyfish, and spiders.

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