TABLE III. INFLUENCE OF POSITION ON LIGHT REACTIONS

Position I Position II Position III Position IV Totals
+± +± +± +± +±
Group 1851087 611354 7411412 929513 31245236
Group 2391333 481261 57118 75100 2194774
12424110 1092615 13123212 16719513 53192940

Since the animals have been shown to be somewhat negatively phototactic, we should expect that position II, with the head away from the light, would show the largest number of negative reactions, and this is what we find if we take the sum of both groups. But by the same course of reasoning we should expect position I, with head toward the light, to yield the smallest number of negative reactions, a condition which prevails neither in the sum nor in either of the groups. On the whole we can only say that difference of position seems to have remarkably little influence on the orientation of the animals.

In his work on the eye of the crayfish, Parker[234] called attention to the migration of the pigment in the retinular cells under the influence of light. The question now arose, what influence, if any, does this pigment migration exert upon the reactions of the crayfish to light? The time required for pigment migration in the eye of the crayfish has never been determined to my knowledge, but from the work of Parker[235] on Palæmonetes it was thought that confinement in the dark for about an hour would be sufficient to bring about a retraction of the pigment. Accordingly, group 1 was kept in the dark for one hour, group 2 for one hour and a half, before experimentation. A further test was made to observe the effects of pigment expansion, both groups having been exposed for one hour and a half to the rays of a 32 c. incandescent electric light at a distance of 40 cm. The apparatus used in the reaction-tests was the box described above, with the 64 c. light as a stimulus. As to the method of observation, each group was placed in the centre of the box at right angles to the horizontal rays of light, and the position of each animal was accurately noted at intervals of one minute for one hour. In reporting the results, all the observations of animals in the half of the box nearest the light are denominated positive, those in the half farthest from the light negative. The results are given in Table IV, where line I indicates the reactions after confinement in the dark, line II those after exposure to the light.