Ryan Laura A, Hart Nathan S, Collin Shaun P, Hemmi Jan M
School of Animal Biology, The University of Western Australia, 35 Stirling Highway, Crawley, WA 6009, Australia
The UWA Oceans Institute, The University of Western Australia, 35 Stirling Highway, Crawley, WA 6009, Australia.
J Exp Biol. 2016 Dec 15;219(Pt 24):3971-3980. doi: 10.1242/jeb.132100. Epub 2016 Oct 24.
Sharks have long been described as having 'poor' vision. They are cone monochromats and anatomical estimates suggest they have low spatial resolution. However, there are no direct behavioural measurements of spatial resolution or contrast sensitivity. This study estimates contrast sensitivity and spatial resolution of two species of benthic sharks, the Port Jackson shark, Heterodontus portusjacksoni, and the brown-banded bamboo shark, Chiloscyllium punctatum, by recording eye movements in response to optokinetic stimuli. Both species tracked moving low spatial frequency gratings with weak but consistent eye movements. Eye movements ceased at 0.38 cycles per degree, even for high contrasts, suggesting low spatial resolution. However, at lower spatial frequencies, eye movements were elicited by low contrast gratings, 1.3% and 2.9% contrast in H portusjacksoni and C. punctatum, respectively. Contrast sensitivity was higher than in other vertebrates with a similar spatial resolving power, which may reflect an adaptation to the relatively low contrast encountered in aquatic environments. Optokinetic gain was consistently low and neither species stabilised the gratings on their retina. To check whether restraining the animals affected their optokinetic responses, we also analysed eye movements in free-swimming C. punctatum We found no eye movements that could compensate for body rotations, suggesting that vision may pass through phases of stabilisation and blur during swimming. As C. punctatum is a sedentary benthic species, gaze stabilisation during swimming may not be essential. Our results suggest that vision in sharks is not 'poor' as previously suggested, but optimised for contrast detection rather than spatial resolution.
长期以来,鲨鱼一直被描述为具有“较差”的视力。它们是圆锥单色视觉动物,解剖学估计表明它们的空间分辨率较低。然而,目前尚无关于空间分辨率或对比敏感度的直接行为测量。本研究通过记录对视动刺激做出反应的眼球运动,来估计两种底栖鲨鱼——杰克逊港鲨鱼(Heterodontus portusjacksoni)和褐带竹鲨(Chiloscyllium punctatum)的对比敏感度和空间分辨率。这两个物种都通过微弱但持续的眼球运动追踪移动的低空间频率光栅。即使对比度很高,眼球运动在每度0.38周时也会停止,这表明空间分辨率较低。然而,在较低的空间频率下,低对比度光栅会引发眼球运动,在杰克逊港鲨鱼和褐带竹鲨中,对比度分别为1.3%和2.9%。其对比敏感度高于具有相似空间分辨能力的其他脊椎动物,这可能反映了对水生环境中相对较低对比度的一种适应。视动增益一直很低,且这两个物种都无法将光栅稳定在视网膜上。为了检查限制动物是否会影响它们的视动反应,我们还分析了自由游动的褐带竹鲨的眼球运动。我们没有发现能够补偿身体旋转的眼球运动,这表明在游泳过程中,视觉可能会经历稳定和模糊的阶段。由于褐带竹鲨是一种 sedentary 底栖物种,游泳时的注视稳定可能并非必不可少。我们的研究结果表明,鲨鱼的视觉并不像之前所认为的那样“差”,而是针对对比度检测而非空间分辨率进行了优化。