THE SENSIBILITY OF THE NOCTURNAL LONG-EARED OWL IN THE SPECTRUM
Open Access
- 20 July 1940
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of general physiology
- Vol. 23 (6), 709-717
- https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.23.6.709
Abstract
Infrared radiation (750–1500 mµ) produces no iris contraction in the typically nocturnal long-eared owl even when the energy content is millions of times greater than that of green light which easily elicits a pupil change. The energies in different parts of the visible spectrum required for a minimal iris response yield a spectral visibility curve for the owl which is the same as the human visibility curve at low light intensities. Functionally, the owl's vision thus corresponds to the predominantly rod structure of its retina, and the idea that nocturnal owls have a special type of vision sensitive to infrared radiation for seeing in the woods at night is erroneous.This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- RODS, CONES, AND THE CHEMICAL BASIS OF VISIONPhysiological Reviews, 1937
- The electrical responses of dark‐adapted frogs' eyes to monochromatic stimuliThe Journal of Physiology, 1937
- The Visibility of Radiation at Low Intensities*Journal of the Optical Society of America, 1937
- THE RESPONSE OF SINGLE VISUAL SENSE CELLS TO LIGHTS OF DIFFERENT WAVE LENGTHSThe Journal of general physiology, 1935
- The Visibility Curve of the White Rat as Determined by the Electrical Retinal Response to Lights of Different Wave-LengthsThe Journal of General Psychology, 1935
- THE RELATION OF TIME, INTENSITY AND WAVE-LENGTH IN THE PHOTOSENSORY SYSTEM OF PHOLASThe Journal of general physiology, 1928
- THE VISIBILITY OF MONOCHROMATIC RADIATION AND THE ABSORPTION SPECTRUM OF VISUAL PURPLEThe Journal of general physiology, 1922
- Zur Anatomie und Physiologie der RetinaArchiv für Mikroskopische Anatomie, 1866