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      SUPPRESSION OF PHOTOTROPIC CIRCUS MOVEMENTS OF LIMAX BY STRYCHNINE

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      The Journal of General Physiology
      The Rockefeller University Press

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          Abstract

          By injection with strychnine the phototropic circus movements of the slug Limax maximus may be suppressed, its phototropism abolished. The creeping activity of the foot is not in any essential way interferred with. Strychnine produces in Limax central nervous effects of the sort associated with its characteristic action. Hence, although an effect of the drug upon photoreceptors cannot be definitely excluded, the experimental result is held to demonstrate that in orientation during circus movements there occurs central "competition" between impulses resulting (1) in the release of pedal waves and (2) in the maintenance of a turning posture.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Gen Physiol
          The Journal of General Physiology
          The Rockefeller University Press
          0022-1295
          1540-7748
          20 November 1924
          : 7
          : 2
          : 221-224
          Affiliations
          From the Zoological Laboratory, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, and the Carnegie Institution of Washington.
          Article
          2140702
          19872131
          117d412b-649b-4218-ae3c-b79705b1c60a
          Copyright © Copyright, 1924, by The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research
          History
          : 23 September 1924
          Categories
          Article

          Anatomy & Physiology
          Anatomy & Physiology

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