scholarly journals Visual Opsin Diversity in Sharks and Rays

2019 ◽  
Vol 37 (3) ◽  
pp. 811-827 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nathan S Hart ◽  
Trevor D Lamb ◽  
Hardip R Patel ◽  
Aaron Chuah ◽  
Riccardo C Natoli ◽  
...  

Abstract The diversity of color vision systems found in extant vertebrates suggests that different evolutionary selection pressures have driven specializations in photoreceptor complement and visual pigment spectral tuning appropriate for an animal’s behavior, habitat, and life history. Aquatic vertebrates in particular show high variability in chromatic vision and have become important models for understanding the role of color vision in prey detection, predator avoidance, and social interactions. In this study, we examined the capacity for chromatic vision in elasmobranch fishes, a group that have received relatively little attention to date. We used microspectrophotometry to measure the spectral absorbance of the visual pigments in the outer segments of individual photoreceptors from several ray and shark species, and we sequenced the opsin mRNAs obtained from the retinas of the same species, as well as from additional elasmobranch species. We reveal the phylogenetically widespread occurrence of dichromatic color vision in rays based on two cone opsins, RH2 and LWS. We also confirm that all shark species studied to date appear to be cone monochromats but report that in different species the single cone opsin may be of either the LWS or the RH2 class. From this, we infer that cone monochromacy in sharks has evolved independently on multiple occasions. Together with earlier discoveries in secondarily aquatic marine mammals, this suggests that cone-based color vision may be of little use for large marine predators, such as sharks, pinnipeds, and cetaceans.

2005 ◽  
Vol 22 (6) ◽  
pp. 873-879 ◽  
Author(s):  
LUCY A. NEWMAN ◽  
PHYLLIS R. ROBINSON

It has long been hypothesized that the visual systems of animals are evolutionarily adapted to their visual environment. The entrance many millions of years ago of mammals into the sea gave these new aquatic mammals completely novel visual surroundings with respect to light availability and predominant wavelengths. This study examines the cone opsins of marine mammals, hypothesizing, based on previous studies [Fasick et al. (1998) and Levenson & Dizon (2003)], that the deep-dwelling marine mammals would not have color vision because the pressure to maintain color vision in the dark monochromatic ocean environment has been relaxed. Short-wavelength-sensitive (SWS) and long-wavelength-sensitive (LWS) cone opsin genes from two orders (Cetacea and Sirenia) and an additional suborder (Pinnipedia) of aquatic mammals were amplified from genomic DNA (for SWS) and cDNA (for LWS) by PCR, cloned, and sequenced. All animals studied from the order Cetacea have SWS pseudogenes, whereas a representative from the order Sirenia has an intact SWS gene, for which the corresponding mRNA was found in the retina. One of the pinnipeds studied (harp seal) has an SWS pseudogene, while another species (harbor seal) appeared to have an intact SWS gene. However, no SWS cone opsin mRNA was found in the harbor seal retina, suggesting a promoter or splice site mutation preventing transcription of the gene. The LWS opsins from the different species were expressed in mammalian cells and reconstituted with the 11-cis-retinal chromophore in order to determine maximal absorption wavelengths (λmax) for each. The deeper dwelling Cetacean species had blue shifted λmax values compared to shallower-dwelling aquatic species. Taken together, these findings support the hypothesis that in the monochromatic oceanic habitat, the pressure to maintain color vision has been relaxed and mutations are retained in the SWS genes, resulting in pseudogenes. Additionally, LWS opsins are retained in the retina and, in deeper-dwelling animals, are blue shifted in λmax.


Abstract.—Data on two shark species, collected in the frame of the European Union program Mediterranean International Trawl Survey Program, are analyzed and reported. Indices of summer abundance per standardized area (per km2) in weight and number are available for both species since 1994 along the European Mediterranean coasts (from the Alboran to the Aegean seas). The studied area, with depths ranging from 10 to 800 m, was divided into five depth strata. Data of 10,000 hauls were analyzed and 44 elasmobranch species identified. The estimated comprehensive standing biomass of elasmobranch fishes within the explored area was 55,000 mt (mt); spiny dogfish <em>Squalus acanthias </em>was one of the most abundant species with an estimated biomass of 6,700 mt, while longnose spiny dogfish <em>S. blainvillei</em>, with about 1,500 mt, represents only 3% of the total biomass. The mean density of spiny dogfish was significantly different between the Mediterranean eastern basin (22.7 kg/km2) and western basin (only 0.8 kg/km2). On the contrary, longnose spiny dogfish shows higher density in the western basin (6.6 kg/km2) than in the eastern one (1.7 kg/km2). However, the spatial distribution of both species is fairly confined; spiny dogfish was caught in only 5% of the tows and longnose spiny dogfish in 3%. Even if the depth range of presence for both species spreads from less than 50 m to more than 700 m, the abundance indexes suggest a major presence in the coastal areas for spiny dogfish. This statement is based primarily on the high densities of the mentioned species in shallow waters of the northern Adriatic Sea; elsewhere the main concentrations are always positioned in the 200–500 m depth range.


2010 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 51-60 ◽  
Author(s):  
CHRISTIAN PULLER ◽  
SILKE HAVERKAMP

AbstractColor vision in mammals is based on the expression of at least two cone opsins that are sensitive to different wavelengths of light. Furthermore, retinal pathways conveying color-opponent signals are required for color discrimination. Most of the primates are trichromats, and “color-coded channels” of their retinas are unveiled to a large extent. In contrast, knowledge of cone-selective pathways in nonprimate dichromats is only slowly emerging, although retinas of dichromats like mice or rats are extensively studied as model systems for retinal information processing. Here, we review recent progress of research on color-coded pathways in nonprimate dichromats to identify differences or similarities between di- and trichromatic mammals. In addition, we applied immunohistochemical methods and confocal microscopy to retinas of different species and present data on their neuronal properties, which are expected to contribute to color vision. Basic neuronal features such as the “blue cone bipolar cell” exist in every species investigated so far. Moreover, there is increasing evidence for chromatic OFF channels in dichromats and retinal ganglion cells that relay color-opponent signals to the brain. In conclusion, di- and trichromats share similar retinal pathways for color transmission and processing.


1998 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
pp. 643-651 ◽  
Author(s):  
JEFFRY I. FASICK ◽  
THOMAS W. CRONIN ◽  
DAVID M. HUNT ◽  
PHYLLIS R. ROBINSON

To assess the dolphin's capacity for color vision and determine the absorption maxima of the dolphin visual pigments, we have cloned and expressed the dolphin opsin genes. On the basis of sequence homology with other mammalian opsins, a dolphin rod and long-wavelength sensitive (LWS) cone opsin cDNAs were identified. Both dolphin opsin cDNAs were expressed in mammalian COS-7 cells. The resulting proteins were reconstituted with the chromophore 11-cis-retinal resulting in functional pigments with absorption maxima (λmax) of 488 and 524 nm for the rod and cone pigments respectively. These λmax values are considerably blue shifted compared to those of many terrestrial mammals. Although the dolphin possesses a gene homologous to other mammalian short-wavelength sensitive (SWS) opsins, it is not expressed in vivo and has accumulated a number of deletions, including a frame-shift mutation at nucleotide position 31. The dolphin therefore lacks the common dichromatic form of color vision typical of most terrestrial mammals.


2019 ◽  
Vol 70 (6) ◽  
pp. 824 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kaitlyn A. Manishin ◽  
Kenneth J. Goldman ◽  
Margaret Short ◽  
Curry J. Cunningham ◽  
Peter A. H. Westley ◽  
...  

Top predators, such as salmon sharks (Lamna ditropis), can influence the abundance and population structure of organisms at lower trophic levels through direct effects, such as predation mortality, and indirect interactions. As a first step towards better understanding the average annual prey consumption for individual adult salmon sharks, we bracketed consumption estimates using three methods: (1) daily ration requirement; (2) bioenergetic mass balance; and (3) a Bayesian model of shark growth. In the first method, we applied ration estimates for related lamnid shark species that yielded salmon shark estimates of 1461 and 2202kgyear–1. The second method used a mass–balance technique to incorporate life history information from salmon sharks and physiological parameters from other species and produced estimates of 1870, 2070, 1610 and 1762kgyear–1, depending on assumed diet. Growth modelling used salmon shark growth histories and yielded estimates of 16900 or 20800kgyear–1, depending on assumed assimilation efficiency. Of the consumption estimates, those from the mass–balance technique may be the most realistic because they incorporated salmon shark life history data and do not produce extreme values. Taken as a whole, these estimates suggest that salmon sharks have similar energetic requirements to piscivorous marine mammals.


2020 ◽  
Vol 71 (1) ◽  
pp. 78 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haseeb S. Randhawa ◽  
Robert Poulin

Most parasites from known host species are yet to be discovered and described, let alone those from host species not yet known to science. Here, we use tapeworms of elasmobranchs to identify factors influencing their discovery and explaining the time lag between the descriptions of elasmobranch hosts and their respective tapeworm parasites. The dataset included 918 tapeworm species from 290 elasmobranch species. Data were analysed using linear mixed-effects models. Our findings indicated that we are currently in the midst of the greatest rate of discovery for tapeworms exploiting elasmobranchs. We identified tapeworm size, year of discovery of the type host, host latitudinal range and type locality of the parasite influencing most on the probability of discovery of tapeworms from elasmobranchs and the average time lag between descriptions of elasmobranchs and their tapeworms. The time lag between descriptions is decreasing progressively, but, at current rates and number of taxonomic experts, it will take two centuries to clear the backlog of undescribed tapeworms from known elasmobranch species. Given that the number of new elasmobranch species described each year is on the rise, we need to re-assess funding strategies to save elasmobranchs (and, thus, their tapeworm parasites) before they go extinct.


Science ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 363 (6425) ◽  
pp. eaat4220 ◽  
Author(s):  
John M. Grady ◽  
Brian S. Maitner ◽  
Ara S. Winter ◽  
Kristin Kaschner ◽  
Derek P. Tittensor ◽  
...  

Species richness of marine mammals and birds is highest in cold, temperate seas—a conspicuous exception to the general latitudinal gradient of decreasing diversity from the tropics to the poles. We compiled a comprehensive dataset for 998 species of sharks, fish, reptiles, mammals, and birds to identify and quantify inverse latitudinal gradients in diversity, and derived a theory to explain these patterns. We found that richness, phylogenetic diversity, and abundance of marine predators diverge systematically with thermoregulatory strategy and water temperature, reflecting metabolic differences between endotherms and ectotherms that drive trophic and competitive interactions. Spatial patterns of foraging support theoretical predictions, with total prey consumption by mammals increasing by a factor of 80 from the equator to the poles after controlling for productivity.


2012 ◽  
Vol 424 (1) ◽  
pp. 152-157 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hisao Ueyama ◽  
Sanae Muraki-Oda ◽  
Shinichi Yamade ◽  
Shoko Tanabe ◽  
Takahiro Yamashita ◽  
...  

It is now firmly established that the coordination of chromatic response in Amphibia is predominantly, if not exclusively, due to the liberation of hormones by reflexes involving visual and skin receptors, and in Reptiles to direct innervation of the pigmentary effector organs (Hogben and Mirvish, 1928; Zoond and Eyre,1934). Among aquatic vertebrates examples of both types of coordination occur. The bulk of available evidence points to the conclusion that the chromatophores of Teleostean fishes are directly innervated and that the comparatively rapid responses which are exhibited by several species are brought about by simple reflex action. That this is not true of cyclostomes has recently been shown by J. Z. Young (1935) whose experiments demonstrate the archaic phylogenetic character of the control exercised by the Amphibian pituitary gland. From an evolutionary standpoint it would not be surprising to find among physiological mechanisms in Teleostean fishes examples of specialization comparable to the strikingly aberrant features which their anatomical organization displays. On the other hand it would be remarkable if the cartilaginous fishes proved an exception to a rule which applies both to Cyclostomes and to Amphibia. Recent work on the colour changes of Elasmobranchs supports the conclusion that the coordination of colour change in Teleostean fishes is highly specialized. Lundstrom and Bard (1932) have shown that total removal of the pituitary gland in Mustelis canis results in a state of pallor which ensues within a few hours after operation, reaching its limit about the twelfth post-operative hour. In their experiments the animals usually succumbed after three or four days with loss of righting reactions. Only a few survived as long as a week. The effect was not produced by removal of the anterior lobe alone, nor by severe traumatization of the hypothalamus. Complete darkening of the pale operated animals followed injections or extracts of ox pituitary and of the pituitary of the fish itself, the quantity present in the fish gland being greatly in excess of the amount requisite to induce full expansion of the dermal melanophores. The present investigation, undertaken to throw further light on the evolution of the chromatic function in Vertebrates, is based on several species of Elasmobranch fishes, namely the skates, Raia Brachiura, R. clavata, R. maculata, R. microcelatus , the speckled dogfish Scyllium canicula , the banded dogfish or nursehound S. catulus (Scylliorhinusstellaris) , and the monkfish Rhina squatina . The writer is indebted to Mr. G. A. Steven for invaluable assistance in identifying the various species used. In all these species the pigmentary effector system of the integument, like that of the American dogfish Mustelis canis , closely resembles that of Amphibia, and consists of three types of chromatophores which are more or less evenly distributed. These are the epidermal melanophores, larger more richly branched dermal melanophores, and xanthophores containing an orange yellow pigment. The same agencies, in the fishes to be described, evoked or maintained pigment diffusion (“expansion”) of all three types, and the concentration of pigment in the centre of the cell (“contraction”) in all three types. That is to say, the xanthophores of a skate or dogfish which was maximally pale were always fully contracted like the melanophores of both kinds, and the xanthophores of a dark animal were fully expanded. This is true of some—but not all—Amphibia. In general appearance the chromatophores of the species studied are more like those of a Urodele than those of a Teleost.


2001 ◽  
Vol 52 (3) ◽  
pp. 291 ◽  
Author(s):  
Olivia S. Haine ◽  
Peter V. Ridd ◽  
Richard J. Rowe

Elasmobranch fishes have a well developed electrosense that is used for prey detection. Research into the nature of bioelectric cues emitted by prey has, however, been neglected, and consequently the spatial context in which the electrosense operates to detect and home in on prey is not completely understood. This study provided data on both ac and dc electric potentials produced by teleost, crustacean and bivalve prey, as well as measured the decay rates of electric field strength with distance. The electrosensitivity of two tropical elasmobranch species was calculated to be ~4 nV cm–1, from which it was calculated that these predators probably detect their prey at a range of ~0. 25 m.


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