scholarly journals THE PHOTOSENSITIVE RETINAL PIGMENTS OF FISHES FROM RELATIVELY TURBID COASTAL WATERS

1958 ◽  
Vol 42 (2) ◽  
pp. 445-459 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frederick W. Munz

Digitonin extracts have been prepared from the retinae of a dozen species of marine and euryhaline teleost fishes from turbid water habitats. Spectrophotometric analysis of the extracts shows that the photosensitive retinal pigments of these species have maximum absorption above 500 mµ. In nine species there are retinene1 pigments with λmax between 504 and 512 mµ. In the marine but euryhaline mullet, Mugil cephalus, there is a porphyropsin with λmax 520 mµ. A mixture of rhodopsin and porphyropsin in an extract of a marine puffer, Sphoeroides annulatus, was disclosed by partial bleaching with colored light. In addition, one other species has a 508 mµ pigment, of which the nature of the chromophore was not determined. The habitats in which these fishes live are relatively turbid, with the water greenish or yellowish in color. The spectral transmission of such waters is probably maximal between 520 and 570 mµ. It is suggested that the fishes have become adapted to these conditions by small but significant shifts in spectral absorption of their retinal pigments. These pigments are decidedly more effective than rhodopsin in absorption of wavelengths above 500 mµ. This offers a possible interpretation of the confusing array of retinal pigments described from marine and euryhaline fishes.

1966 ◽  
Vol 12 (8) ◽  
pp. 509-512
Author(s):  
Sanford H Jackson

Abstract The presence of the nonionic detergent Brij 35 in a solution of oxyhemoglobin and bilirubin has been found to change the spectral transmission curve of the oxyhemoglobin. The major change is in the 475 mµ region, where the transmission is greatly increased. A combination of the bilirubin with the oxyhemoglobin by an intermediate linkage with the Brij is postulated.


2013 ◽  
Vol 10 (6) ◽  
pp. 9003-9041
Author(s):  
X. Zhang ◽  
Y. Huot ◽  
D. J. Gray ◽  
A. Weidemann ◽  
W. J. Rhea

Abstract. In the aquatic environment, particles can be broadly separated into phytoplankton (PHY), non-algal particle (NAP) and dissolved (or very small particle, VSP) fractions. Typically, absorption spectra are inverted to quantify these fractions, but volume scattering functions (VSFs) can also be used. Both absorption spectra and VSFs were used to calculate particle fractions for an experiment in Chesapeake Bay. A complete set of water inherent optical properties was measured using a suite of commercial instruments and a prototype Multispectral Volume Scattering Meter (MVSM); the chlorophyll concentration, [Chl] was determined using the HPLC method. The total scattering coefficient (measured by an ac-s) and the VSF (at a few backward angles, measured by a HydroScat 6 and an ECO-VSF) agreed with the LISST and MVSM data within 5%, thus indicating inter-instrument consistency. The size distribution and scattering parameters for PHY, NAP and VSP were inverted from measured VSFs. For the absorption inversion, the "dissolved" absorption spectra were measured for filtrate passing through a 0.2 μm filter, whereas [Chl] and NAP absorption spectra were inverted from the particulate fraction. Even though the total scattering coefficient showed no correlation with [Chl], estimates of [Chl] from the VSF-inversion agreed well with the HPLC measurements (r = 0.68, mean relative error s = −20%). The scattering associated with NAP and VSP both correlated well with the NAP and "dissolved" absorption coefficients, respectively. While NAP dominated forward, and hence total, scattering, our results also suggest that the scattering by VSP was far from negligible and dominated backscattering.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (14) ◽  
pp. 2722
Author(s):  
Shiming Lu ◽  
Mingjun He ◽  
Shuangyan He ◽  
Shuo He ◽  
Yunhe Pan ◽  
...  

Clouds severely hinder the radiative transmission of visible light; thus, correctly masking cloudy and non-cloudy pixels is a preliminary step in processing ocean color remote sensing data. However, cloud masking over turbid waters is prone to misjudgment, leading to loss of non-cloudy pixel data. This research proposes an improved cloud masking method over turbid water to classify cloudy and non-cloudy pixels based on spectral variability of Rayleigh-corrected reflectance acquired by the Geostationary Ocean Color Imager (GOCI). Compared with other existing cloud masking methods, we demonstrated that this improved method can identify the spatial positions and shapes of clouds more realistically, and more accurate pixels of turbid waters were retained. This improved method can be effectively applied in typical turbid coastal waters. It has potential to be used in cloud masking procedures of spaceborne ocean color sensors without short-wave infrared bands.


2010 ◽  
Vol 62 (1) ◽  
pp. 107-114 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Mickovic ◽  
M. Nikcevic ◽  
A. Hegedis ◽  
S. Regner ◽  
Z. Gacic ◽  
...  

Three localities, representing three distinct coastal areas, were investigated: 1. the mouth of the Sutorina River; 2. the mouth of the Jaska River; 3. the mouth of the Bojana River (right branch). Regarding the composition of young mullet assemblages, Lisa saliens, Lisa ramada and Lisa aurata were dominant at the first locality; L. aurata and Chelon labrosus at the second; and at the third L. ramada was clearly dominant, Mugil cephalus occupied the subdominant position, while L. aurata was absent. The seasons of the first appearance of migratory fry were October, April, November, October and July, for M. cephalus, C. labrosus, L. ramada, L. aurata and L. saliens, respectively. Migratory periods varied from 2 (C. labrosus) to 7 (L. ramada) months.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Angel Jimenez Brito

<p>Mugil cephalus is a cosmopolitan fish species found in most coastal waters from tropical to temperate zones. It is a species common in the near-shore marine environment, and known to reside in estuarine and freshwater systems. Adult M. cephalus move out to sea to spawn in aggregations. Their larvae can drift on surface ocean currents for over a month before recruitment to nursery grounds. Mugil cephalus is a species that is closely associated with the coastal environment, but it is capable of interoceanic migrations. Population genetic studies have reported high levels of genetic differentiation among populations in the Mediterranean, Atlantic and western Pacific. However, there is no evidence to suggest reproductive incompatibility has arisen among populations. In New Zealand M. cephalus supports important recreational, commercial and customary fisheries, but very little is known about the distribution and connectivity among populations.  The aim of this study was to use nuclear microsatellite DNA (msatDNA) and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) markers to describe the population genetic structure, connectivity patterns and to determine the phylogeographic history of New Zealand M. cephalus populations. Total of 850 samples were collected (576 adults and 274 juveniles) during the summers of 2010 and 2014-2015 from 15 locations around coastal and inland waters of the North Island, and one location in Marlborough Sounds. In addition, 245 mtDNA sequences were added from previously published studies and used to outgroup the New Zealand population and place it into the context of the other Pacific populations.  Seven msatDNA loci were isolated and used to determine the population genetic structure and connectivity patterns of M. cephalus in New Zealand. Admixture of four genetically distinct groups or populations was identified and a chaotic spatial distribution of allele frequencies. Within each population there was significant gene flow among locations, no pattern of genetic isolation-by-distance was identified and there was a high proportion of non-migrant individuals. There was evidence of bottlenecks and seasonal reproductive variation of adults, which could explain the significant shifts in the effective population size among locations.  To test whether the pattern of genetic variation in M. cephalus populations was the result of seasonal variability in the reproductive success of adults, DNA from adult and juvenile samples were used to test for differences in the levels of genetic variation between generations (cohorts). Juveniles were grouped by age classes and compared to the adults. The levels of genetic diversity within the groups of juveniles were compared to the adult population and significant genetic bottlenecks between juveniles and adults were detected. This pattern was consistent with the Sweepstake-Reproductive-Success hypothesis. Two spawning groups in the adults were identified, an early spawning group and a late spawning group.  The analysis of DNA sequence data from the mtDNA Cytochrome Oxidase subunit 1 (COX1) gene and D-loop region showed two sympatric haplogroups of M. cephalus. New Zealand was most likely colonised by M. cephalus migrants from different population sources from the Pacific first ~50,000 and a second wave of migrants from Australia between ~20, 000 and ~16,000 years ago. High levels of gene flow were detected, but there has not been enough time for genetic drift to completely sort the lineages.  The findings of this thesis research will help with the understanding of aspects of M. cephalus dispersal and the genetic structure of populations. The patterns of connectivity can be used to better align the natural boundaries of wild populations to the fishery management stock structure. Understanding the reproductive units, levels of genetic diversity and the patterns of reproduction of M. cephalus will assist management efforts to focus on the key habitats threats, risks and the long-term sustainability of the species.</p>


2019 ◽  
Vol 316 (6) ◽  
pp. R735-R750 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sean C. Lema ◽  
Elsie H. Washburn ◽  
Mary E. Crowley ◽  
Paul G. Carvalho ◽  
Jennifer N. Egelston ◽  
...  

The nonapeptide arginine vasotocin (AVT) regulates osmotic balance in teleost fishes, but its mechanisms of action are not fully understood. Recently, it was discovered that nonapeptide receptors in teleost fishes are differentiated into two V1a-type, several V2-type, and two isotocin (IT) receptors, but it remains unclear which receptors mediate AVT’s effects on gill osmoregulation. Here, we examined the role of nonapeptide receptors in the gill of the euryhaline Amargosa pupfish ( Cyprinodon nevadensis amargosae) during osmotic acclimation. Transcripts for the teleost V1a-type receptor v1a2 were upregulated over fourfold in gill 24 h after transferring pupfish from 7.5 ppt to seawater (35 ppt) or hypersaline (55 ppt) conditions and downregulated after transfer to freshwater (0.3 ppt). Gill transcripts for the nonapeptide degradation enzyme leucyl-cystinyl aminopeptidase (LNPEP) also increased in fish acclimating to 35 ppt. To test whether the effects of AVT on the gill might be mediated by a V1a-type receptor, we administered AVT or a V1-type receptor antagonist (Manning compound) intraperitoneally to pupfish before transfer to 0.4 ppt or 35 ppt. Pupfish transferred to 35 ppt exhibited elevated gill mRNA abundance for cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator ( cftr), but that upregulation diminished under V1-receptor inhibition. AVT inhibited the increase in gill Na+/Cl− cotransporter 2 ( ncc2) transcript abundance that occurs following transfer to hypoosmotic environments, whereas V1-type receptor antagonism increased ncc2 mRNAs even without a change in salinity. These findings indicate that AVT acts via a V1-type receptor to regulate gill Cl− transport by inhibiting Cl− uptake and facilitating Cl− secretion during seawater acclimation.


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