The melanophores in the catfish I. melas are arranged in 3 layers, one epidermal and two dermal. The former are the smallest, and also differ from those in the dermis in their shape and in their reaction-times in response to background change. Hypophysectomy impairs the ability of the animal to adapt to a black background but has apparently no effect on white adaptation. It severely affects the dispersion of pigment in the epidermal melanophores in comparison to the lower dermal ones. Equilibration on different greys and in darkness of hypophysectomised specimens indicates that the pituitary gland plays no role in the initial phases of dispersion or in adaptation to darkness. The removal of the pituitary also appears to accelerate the initi...
<p>Melanosome aggregation-dispersion in response to a rapid succession of background color change wa...
HOGBEN (1924) first drew attention to a broad distinction between two classes of chromatic behaviour...
p. 87-106, [8] p. of plates : ill. ; 27 cm.Includes bibliographical references (p. 105-106)."One. Th...
A brief summary of previous literature on vertebrate chromatic responses is presented. The influence...
Intact and chromatically spinal sectioned minnows of known background histories; were exposed to ill...
The integument of the minnow phoxinus phoxinus (L.) was studied using both light and electron micros...
The melanin-concentrating hormone is a general vertebrate neurosecretory peptide which, in bony fish...
Changes in state of melanophores in the minnow, Phoxinus phoxinus (L) -, which are known to be contr...
<div><p>(A) Melanophore response to the agonist epinephrine. Fish were placed in black backgrounds f...
The color changes in the elasmobranch fishes have received scant at tention. Aside from the negative...
Colour change of the skin in lower vertebrates such as fish has been a subject of great scientific a...
The chromatic physiology of the stoneloach (Noemacheilus barbatulus L.) was investigated by recordi...
The pituitary gland is of primary importance in amphibian color change (Hogben, 1924) and its remova...
Hypothalamic melanin-concentrating hormone (MCH) neurones occur in all vertebrates and have an appar...
Contains fulltext : 33260.pdf ( ) (Open Access)The ability to adjust skin darkness...
<p>Melanosome aggregation-dispersion in response to a rapid succession of background color change wa...
HOGBEN (1924) first drew attention to a broad distinction between two classes of chromatic behaviour...
p. 87-106, [8] p. of plates : ill. ; 27 cm.Includes bibliographical references (p. 105-106)."One. Th...
A brief summary of previous literature on vertebrate chromatic responses is presented. The influence...
Intact and chromatically spinal sectioned minnows of known background histories; were exposed to ill...
The integument of the minnow phoxinus phoxinus (L.) was studied using both light and electron micros...
The melanin-concentrating hormone is a general vertebrate neurosecretory peptide which, in bony fish...
Changes in state of melanophores in the minnow, Phoxinus phoxinus (L) -, which are known to be contr...
<div><p>(A) Melanophore response to the agonist epinephrine. Fish were placed in black backgrounds f...
The color changes in the elasmobranch fishes have received scant at tention. Aside from the negative...
Colour change of the skin in lower vertebrates such as fish has been a subject of great scientific a...
The chromatic physiology of the stoneloach (Noemacheilus barbatulus L.) was investigated by recordi...
The pituitary gland is of primary importance in amphibian color change (Hogben, 1924) and its remova...
Hypothalamic melanin-concentrating hormone (MCH) neurones occur in all vertebrates and have an appar...
Contains fulltext : 33260.pdf ( ) (Open Access)The ability to adjust skin darkness...
<p>Melanosome aggregation-dispersion in response to a rapid succession of background color change wa...
HOGBEN (1924) first drew attention to a broad distinction between two classes of chromatic behaviour...
p. 87-106, [8] p. of plates : ill. ; 27 cm.Includes bibliographical references (p. 105-106)."One. Th...