Department of Psychology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2E9, Canada.
J Fish Biol. 2012 Apr;80(5):2024-54. doi: 10.1111/j.1095-8649.2012.03253.x. Epub 2012 Mar 22.
This review identifies a number of exciting new developments in the understanding of vision in cartilaginous fishes that have been made since the turn of the century. These include the results of studies on various aspects of the visual system including eye size, visual fields, eye design and the optical system, retinal topography and spatial resolving power, visual pigments, spectral sensitivity and the potential for colour vision. A number of these studies have covered a broad range of species, thereby providing valuable information on how the visual systems of these fishes are adapted to different environmental conditions. For example, oceanic and deep-sea sharks have the largest eyes amongst elasmobranchs and presumably rely more heavily on vision than coastal and benthic species, while interspecific variation in the ratio of rod and cone photoreceptors, the topographic distribution of the photoreceptors and retinal ganglion cells in the retina and the spatial resolving power of the eye all appear to be closely related to differences in habitat and lifestyle. Multiple, spectrally distinct cone photoreceptor visual pigments have been found in some batoid species, raising the possibility that at least some elasmobranchs are capable of seeing colour, and there is some evidence that multiple cone visual pigments may also be present in holocephalans. In contrast, sharks appear to have only one cone visual pigment. There is evidence that ontogenetic changes in the visual system, such as changes in the spectral transmission properties of the lens, lens shape, focal ratio, visual pigments and spatial resolving power, allow elasmobranchs to adapt to environmental changes imposed by habitat shifts and niche expansion. There are, however, many aspects of vision in these fishes that are not well understood, particularly in the holocephalans. Therefore, this review also serves to highlight and stimulate new research in areas that still require significant attention.
这篇综述确定了自本世纪初以来,软骨鱼类视觉理解方面的一些令人兴奋的新进展。这些进展包括对视觉系统各个方面的研究结果,包括眼睛大小、视野、眼睛设计和光学系统、视网膜拓扑和空间分辨率、视觉色素、光谱灵敏度以及颜色视觉的潜力。这些研究中的许多研究涵盖了广泛的物种,从而提供了有关这些鱼类的视觉系统如何适应不同环境条件的宝贵信息。例如,大洋和深海鲨鱼在软骨鱼类中拥有最大的眼睛,并且可能比沿海和底栖物种更依赖于视觉,而杆状和锥状光感受器的比例、光感受器和视网膜神经节细胞在视网膜中的拓扑分布以及眼睛的空间分辨率的种间变化似乎都与栖息地和生活方式的差异密切相关。一些板鳃鱼类中发现了多种光谱上不同的锥状光感受器视觉色素,这增加了至少一些软骨鱼类具有色觉的可能性,并且有证据表明,多锥状视觉色素也可能存在于全头类中。相比之下,鲨鱼似乎只有一种锥状视觉色素。有证据表明,视觉系统的个体发育变化,例如晶状体光谱透过率、晶状体形状、焦距比、视觉色素和空间分辨率的变化,使软骨鱼类能够适应栖息地转移和生态位扩展所带来的环境变化。然而,这些鱼类的视觉有许多方面还不是很清楚,特别是在全头类中。因此,这篇综述也旨在突出和激发仍需要重点关注的领域的新研究。