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Photon Hunting in the Twilight Zone: Visual Features of Mesopelagic Bioluminescent Sharks

The mesopelagic zone is a visual scene continuum in which organisms have developed various strategies to optimize photon capture. Here, we used light microscopy, stereology-assisted retinal topographic mapping, spectrophotometry and microspectrophotometry to investigate the visual ecology of deep-se...

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Autores principales: Claes, Julien M., Partridge, Julian C., Hart, Nathan S., Garza-Gisholt, Eduardo, Ho, Hsuan-Ching, Mallefet, Jérôme, Collin, Shaun P.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4123902/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25099504
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0104213
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author Claes, Julien M.
Partridge, Julian C.
Hart, Nathan S.
Garza-Gisholt, Eduardo
Ho, Hsuan-Ching
Mallefet, Jérôme
Collin, Shaun P.
author_facet Claes, Julien M.
Partridge, Julian C.
Hart, Nathan S.
Garza-Gisholt, Eduardo
Ho, Hsuan-Ching
Mallefet, Jérôme
Collin, Shaun P.
author_sort Claes, Julien M.
collection PubMed
description The mesopelagic zone is a visual scene continuum in which organisms have developed various strategies to optimize photon capture. Here, we used light microscopy, stereology-assisted retinal topographic mapping, spectrophotometry and microspectrophotometry to investigate the visual ecology of deep-sea bioluminescent sharks [four etmopterid species (Etmopterus lucifer, E. splendidus, E. spinax and Trigonognathus kabeyai) and one dalatiid species (Squaliolus aliae)]. We highlighted a novel structure, a translucent area present in the upper eye orbit of Etmopteridae, which might be part of a reference system for counterillumination adjustment or acts as a spectral filter for camouflage breaking, as well as several ocular specialisations such as aphakic gaps and semicircular tapeta previously unknown in elasmobranchs. All species showed pure rod hexagonal mosaics with a high topographic diversity. Retinal specialisations, formed by shallow cell density gradients, may aid in prey detection and reflect lifestyle differences; pelagic species display areae centrales while benthopelagic and benthic species display wide and narrow horizontal streaks, respectively. One species (E. lucifer) displays two areae within its horizontal streak that likely allows detection of conspecifics' elongated bioluminescent flank markings. Ganglion cell topography reveals less variation with all species showing a temporal area for acute frontal binocular vision. This area is dorsally extended in T. kabeyai, allowing this species to adjust the strike of its peculiar jaws in the ventro-frontal visual field. Etmopterus lucifer showed an additional nasal area matching a high rod density area. Peak spectral sensitivities of the rod visual pigments (λ(max)) fall within the range 484–491 nm, allowing these sharks to detect a high proportion of photons present in their habitat. Comparisons with previously published data reveal ocular differences between bioluminescent and non-bioluminescent deep-sea sharks. In particular, bioluminescent sharks possess higher rod densities, which might provide them with improved temporal resolution particularly useful for bioluminescent communication during social interactions.
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spelling pubmed-41239022014-08-12 Photon Hunting in the Twilight Zone: Visual Features of Mesopelagic Bioluminescent Sharks Claes, Julien M. Partridge, Julian C. Hart, Nathan S. Garza-Gisholt, Eduardo Ho, Hsuan-Ching Mallefet, Jérôme Collin, Shaun P. PLoS One Research Article The mesopelagic zone is a visual scene continuum in which organisms have developed various strategies to optimize photon capture. Here, we used light microscopy, stereology-assisted retinal topographic mapping, spectrophotometry and microspectrophotometry to investigate the visual ecology of deep-sea bioluminescent sharks [four etmopterid species (Etmopterus lucifer, E. splendidus, E. spinax and Trigonognathus kabeyai) and one dalatiid species (Squaliolus aliae)]. We highlighted a novel structure, a translucent area present in the upper eye orbit of Etmopteridae, which might be part of a reference system for counterillumination adjustment or acts as a spectral filter for camouflage breaking, as well as several ocular specialisations such as aphakic gaps and semicircular tapeta previously unknown in elasmobranchs. All species showed pure rod hexagonal mosaics with a high topographic diversity. Retinal specialisations, formed by shallow cell density gradients, may aid in prey detection and reflect lifestyle differences; pelagic species display areae centrales while benthopelagic and benthic species display wide and narrow horizontal streaks, respectively. One species (E. lucifer) displays two areae within its horizontal streak that likely allows detection of conspecifics' elongated bioluminescent flank markings. Ganglion cell topography reveals less variation with all species showing a temporal area for acute frontal binocular vision. This area is dorsally extended in T. kabeyai, allowing this species to adjust the strike of its peculiar jaws in the ventro-frontal visual field. Etmopterus lucifer showed an additional nasal area matching a high rod density area. Peak spectral sensitivities of the rod visual pigments (λ(max)) fall within the range 484–491 nm, allowing these sharks to detect a high proportion of photons present in their habitat. Comparisons with previously published data reveal ocular differences between bioluminescent and non-bioluminescent deep-sea sharks. In particular, bioluminescent sharks possess higher rod densities, which might provide them with improved temporal resolution particularly useful for bioluminescent communication during social interactions. Public Library of Science 2014-08-06 /pmc/articles/PMC4123902/ /pubmed/25099504 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0104213 Text en © 2014 Claes et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Claes, Julien M.
Partridge, Julian C.
Hart, Nathan S.
Garza-Gisholt, Eduardo
Ho, Hsuan-Ching
Mallefet, Jérôme
Collin, Shaun P.
Photon Hunting in the Twilight Zone: Visual Features of Mesopelagic Bioluminescent Sharks
title Photon Hunting in the Twilight Zone: Visual Features of Mesopelagic Bioluminescent Sharks
title_full Photon Hunting in the Twilight Zone: Visual Features of Mesopelagic Bioluminescent Sharks
title_fullStr Photon Hunting in the Twilight Zone: Visual Features of Mesopelagic Bioluminescent Sharks
title_full_unstemmed Photon Hunting in the Twilight Zone: Visual Features of Mesopelagic Bioluminescent Sharks
title_short Photon Hunting in the Twilight Zone: Visual Features of Mesopelagic Bioluminescent Sharks
title_sort photon hunting in the twilight zone: visual features of mesopelagic bioluminescent sharks
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4123902/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25099504
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0104213
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