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Transparency in organisms
Authors:G Chapman
Institution:(1) Department of Biology, Queen Elizabeth College, Campden Hill Road, W8 7AH London, (England)
Abstract:Summary The occurrence in animal phyla of species having a relatively transparent body is noted and measurements of the transmittance of medusae made in a spectrophotometer are reported, but the approximate nature of the results obtained with a commercial instrument and the importance of the correct physical design of the measuring apparatus are emphasized. The application to invertebrates of the structural explanation of the predominant transmission of incident light by the vertebrate cornea is discussed and the role of other factors considered. Destructive interference of the scattered rays, sufficient to account for the transparency of the cornea, has been shown not to demand a completely regular arrangement of collagen fibres. The small diameter and regularity of the fibrillar components in the muscles ofSagitta may be adequate to account for their transparency.I am grateful to Dr.D. M. Maurice for the encouragement of this interest, to Dr.E. G. Jordan for electron micrographs ofSagitta and to Mr.G. Ross (Department of Physics, Queen Elizabeth College) for helpful and critical discussion.
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