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In the comparative physiology of photoreception by the Protista and
the invertebrates two aspects are emphasized: (1) the diversity of
visual processes in these groups and (2) their bearing upon general
mechanisms of photoreception. Invertebrates have evolved a far
greater variety of adaptations than vertebrates modifications
aiding survival in the remarkably different biotopes they occupy.
The number of species in itself suggests this multiformity; each of
them has peculiarities of its own, in morphology as well as in
physiology and behavior. But these special adaptations are
variations on a few great themes. Although the catalogue of
invertebrate species is immense, the literature concerning them
nearly rivals it in extent-even if one considers only that fraction
dealing with visual physiology. Taxonomy proceeds by grouping the
species, categorizing them in genera, families, orders, and
progressively larger units. Similarly, comparative physiology aims
at an analogous, more or less compre hensive, classification. This
Part A of Volume VII/6, like Part B that follows it, emphasizes the
broad questions that concern groups larger than the individual
species; in some cases these questions have general applicability.
The middle course between approaches that are too specialized and
those that are too general is often elusive, but here we attempt to
follow it. The vast number of special adaptations-probably, as we
have said, as large as the number of species-is beyond the range
even of a handbook."
This book is written for our friends in Germany and abroad to give
an account of our main interests during the last years. We
gratefully take the opportunity provided by Springer Verlag with
the Series Studies of Brain Function to present some of our recent
work on vision in Drosophila in a coherent form and in a broader
context than publications in periodicals would permit. We want to
picture the visual system of the fly fitting it into the natural
history from which our own vision emerged. In this perspective
genetics seems to be a useful ap- proach. Our study is a rather
personal exercise. We have neither the expertise nor the ambition
to cover the whole literature or to compile- all the knowledge
about vision in flies. We are not even in a position to present,
with the appropriate weight and breadth, the pioneering
contributions of those who established this field of research. Our
account mirrors our own intersects. We are selecting and
interpreting other peoples' work from this subjective point of
view, although we try to present it in its own right. For several
years we have been fascinated by the first glimpses of the "inner
life" of an insect and we hope to convey this fascination to those
who are not discouraged by the scien- tific procedure.
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