Johnsen S
Biology Department, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, USA.
Biol Bull. 2001 Dec;201(3):301-18. doi: 10.2307/1543609.
Despite the prevalence and importance of transparency in organisms, particularly pelagic species, it is a poorly understood characteristic. This article reviews the current state of knowledge on the distribution, ecology, and physical basis of biological transparency. Particular attention is paid to the distribution of transparent species relative to their optical environment, the relationship between transparency and visual predation, the physics of transparency, and what is known about the anatomical and ultrastructural modifications required to achieve this condition. Transparency is shown to be primarily a pelagic trait, uncommon in other aquatic habitats and extremely rare on land. Experimental and theoretical studies in terrestrial, freshwater, and marine ecosystems have shown that transparency is a successful form of camouflage, and that several visual adaptations seem to counter it. The physical basis of transparency is still poorly understood, but anatomical observations and mathematical models show that there are various routes to transparency. Future avenues for research include examination of the ultrastructure and optical properties of transparent tissue, exploring the link between transparent species and special visual modifications in the species they interact with, and analysis of the evolution of transparency using comparative methods.
尽管透明度在生物体中普遍存在且具有重要意义,尤其是在远洋物种中,但它仍是一个鲜为人知的特征。本文综述了有关生物透明度的分布、生态学和物理基础的当前知识状态。特别关注透明物种相对于其光学环境的分布、透明度与视觉捕食之间的关系、透明度的物理学原理,以及关于实现这种状态所需的解剖学和超微结构改变的已知情况。结果表明,透明度主要是一种远洋特征,在其他水生生境中并不常见,在陆地上极为罕见。陆地、淡水和海洋生态系统中的实验和理论研究表明,透明度是一种成功的伪装形式,并且一些视觉适应性似乎可以应对它。透明度的物理基础仍然知之甚少,但解剖学观察和数学模型表明,实现透明度有多种途径。未来的研究方向包括检查透明组织的超微结构和光学特性、探索透明物种与其相互作用物种的特殊视觉改变之间的联系,以及使用比较方法分析透明度的进化。