“…However, nitrergic ganglion cells and photoreceptors have been described for the retina of teleosts (Ostholm et al, ; Pottek et al, ; Ota et al, ; Haamedi and Djamgoz, ), amphibians (Nöll et al, ; Kurenni et al, ; Blom et al, ), reptiles (Blute et al, ), birds (Fischer and Stell, ; Wilson et al, ; Tekmen‐Clark and Gleason, ), and mammals (Blom et al, ), where NOS‐ir photoreceptors have not been detected. In addition, nitrergic bipolar cells have been reported for chondrichthyes (Shiells and Falk, ), amphibians (Nöll et al, ; Kurenni et al, ; Blom et al, ), and reptiles (Cao and Eldred, ), whereas horizontal nitrergic cells have been described only for teleosts (Ota et al, ; Haamedi and Djamgoz, ) and reptiles (Haverkamp and Eldred, ; Cuenca et al, ). This increased diversity of nitrergic retinal types observed in more evolved groups of vertebrates could be related to new functions of NO in the retina such as light‐adaptive changes (Greenstreet and Djamgoz, ; Djamgoz et al, ; Angotzi et al, ; Sato et al, ) or circadian effects in photoreceptor activity (Ko et al, ).…”