SUMMARY
(1) Crayfish are somewhat negatively phototactic, going away from rather than toward the source of light in the ratio of 62% to 38%. The different intensities employed in this investigation produced very little difference in the reactions. The average reaction-time was much less for the group of animals which showed the highest percentage of negative reactions, indicating a greater general sensitiveness. Variations of the position in which the animals were set affected the results very slightly.
(2) Previous confinement in the dark tended to increase slightly the number of negative reactions, and previous exposure to strong light tended to decrease the number, but the results were not constant. An increase in temperature tended to decrease the number of negative reactions to light, but here again the results were somewhat conflicting.
(3) Reactions to horizontal colored light showed a tendency to go to the colored light rather than to the white in the following order: Blue 47%, green 50.5%, black (or the absence of light) 51%, red 54%, yellow 59%. In the case of vertical colored light the comparison with the white resulted somewhat differently, as follows: Green 53%, yellow 53.5%, blue 57%, black 57%, red 72.5%. In the latter experiments the animals showed a marked and constant preference for the red.
(4) The animals showed no signs of reaction to static objects from visual stimulation, i. e., there is no evidence of visual perception of form in the case of stationary objects. Moving objects, especially large ones, are plainly perceived and definitely reacted to.
(5) There were no reactions whatever caused by those vibrations which to the human ear produce sound. So far as these experiments go, the animals cannot be said to hear.
(6) In rotation experiments individual animals were rather constant in moving either with or against the direction of the rotation, but no definite tendency for all animals was observed.
(7) The pull of gravity was followed with constantly increasing frequency from 58% at 5° to 89% at 25°. Therefore we conclude that the animals are positively geotactic. They are negatively barotactic, avoiding the pressure of water at the depth of 20 cm., and this is sufficient to overcome their positive geotaxis. When placed upon a level surface the animals show a peculiar tendency to turn through a greater or less angle before starting out in a straight line. In only 18 out of 375 observations, or 5%, did the animals start straight, in 30% they turned through an angle of less than 90°, and in 65% they turned through an angle of 90° or more.
(8) The crayfish is positively thigmotactic in a marked degree, as is indicated by the fact that in only 33 out of 572 observations, or less than 6%, were the animals found resting in the open, while in 190, or 33%, they were found in a narrow opening between two vertical surfaces.
(9) The animal is sensitive to touch over the whole surface of the body, but especially on the chelæ and chelipedes, the mouth-parts, the ventral surface of the abdomen, and the edge of the telson. If one side of the carapace or of the dorsal surface of the abdomen be stimulated, the extensors of the legs on the opposite side are contracted, and the animal turns on its antero-posterior axis toward the source of the stimulus. If opposite sides be stimulated alternately, a peculiar rolling motion is set up.