Color vision and visual sensitivity in the California ground squirrel (Citellus beecheyi)
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Repellent application strategy for wild rodents and cottontail rabbits
2016, Applied Animal Behaviour ScienceCitation Excerpt :The repellent application strategy described herein (i.e. UV, postingestive repellent and associated UV visual cue) has implications for several wild rodents and rabbits. Although the spectral sensitivity function peaks at 520 nm in California ground squirrels (i.e. VS visual pigments; Otospermophilus beecheyi; Anderson and Jacobs, 1972), the lens of Mexican ground squirrels (Ictidomys mexicanus) exhibits λmax of 265–370 nm (i.e. UVS visual pigments; Cooper and Robson, 1969). In Richardson’s ground squirrels, 50% of incident illumination is transmitted at 462 nm and 0.6% of light from 315 to 400 nm is transmitted by the lens (Douglas and Jeffery, 2014).
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