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very important, especially the comparison of vertebrate and
invertebrate transduction mechanisms. The workshop was very
successful and the outcome of the discussions proved it worth the
effort. To no small extent has that success been made possible by
Dr. Silke Bernhard who with a combination of authority and charm
together with her extremely efficient and dedicated staff organized
this workshop, providing the conditions and framework for a
scientific debate of outstanding quality in a friendly and pleasant
atmosphere. The great majority of participants were also very
committed to making this workshop successful. Besides the reports
of the four discussion groups, this publication contains the
background papers which were revised by the authors partly as a
result of suggestions of some participants. I hope this book will
give a fair overview of the state of our knowledge of research in
visual transduction. It was a pleasure to edit, especially because
of the friendly and very efficient commitment of K. Geue, J. Lupp,
and A. Eckert and the cooperativeness of most of the contributors.
Particularly I would like to acknowledge gratefully the extensive
efforts and patience of the four rapporteurs, M.L. Applebury, W.H.
Miller, W.G. Owen, and E.N. Pugh, Jr., in compiling, writing, and
revising the group reports. REFERENCES (1) Altman, J. 1985. Sensory
transduction, new visions in photoreception. Nature 313: 264-265.
(2) Hagins, W.A. 1972. The visual process: Excitatory mechanisms in
the primary receptor cells. Ann. Rev. Biophys. Bioeng. 1: 131-158.
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 scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone
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