Tyrrell Luke P, Fernández-Juricic Esteban
Purdue University, Department of Biological Sciences, West Lafayette, Indiana, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2017 Mar 29;12(3):e0173235. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0173235. eCollection 2017.
With the exception of primates, most vertebrates have laterally placed eyes. Binocular vision in vertebrates has been implicated in several functions, including depth perception, contrast discrimination, etc. However, the blind area in front of the head that is proximal to the binocular visual field is often neglected. This anterior blind area is important when discussing the evolution of binocular vision because its relative length is inversely correlated with the width of the binocular field. Therefore, species with wider binocular fields also have shorter anterior blind areas and objects along the mid-sagittal plane can be imaged at closer distances. Additionally, the anterior blind area is of functional significance for birds because the beak falls within this blind area. We tested for the first time some specific predictions about the functional role of the anterior blind area in birds controlling for phylogenetic effects. We used published data on visual field configuration in 40 species of birds and measured beak and skull parameters from museum specimens. We found that birds with proportionally longer beaks have longer anterior blind areas and thus narrower binocular fields. This result suggests that the anterior blind area and beak visibility do play a role in shaping binocular fields, and that binocular field width is not solely determined by the need for stereoscopic vision. In visually guided foragers, the ability to see the beak-and how much of the beak can be seen-varies predictably with foraging habits. For example, fish- and insect-eating specialists can see more of their own beak than birds eating immobile food can. But in non-visually guided foragers, there is no consistent relationship between the beak and anterior blind area. We discuss different strategies-wide binocular fields, large eye movements, and long beaks-that minimize the potential negative effects of the anterior blind area. Overall, we argue that there is more to avian binocularity than meets the eye.
除灵长类动物外,大多数脊椎动物的眼睛位于身体两侧。脊椎动物的双眼视觉涉及多种功能,包括深度感知、对比度辨别等。然而,头部前方靠近双眼视野的盲区常常被忽视。在讨论双眼视觉的进化时,这个前部盲区很重要,因为它的相对长度与双眼视野的宽度呈负相关。因此,双眼视野较宽的物种前部盲区较短,沿矢状面中线的物体可以在更近的距离成像。此外,前部盲区对鸟类具有功能意义,因为喙位于这个盲区范围内。我们首次针对前部盲区在鸟类中的功能作用进行了一些特定预测,并控制了系统发育效应。我们使用了已发表的40种鸟类视野配置的数据,并从博物馆标本中测量了喙和头骨参数。我们发现喙相对较长的鸟类前部盲区较长,因此双眼视野较窄。这一结果表明,前部盲区和喙的可见性确实在塑造双眼视野中发挥作用,而且双眼视野宽度并非仅由立体视觉的需求决定。在视觉引导觅食的鸟类中,看到喙的能力以及能看到多少喙,会因觅食习惯而有可预测的变化。例如,以鱼和昆虫为食的专家型鸟类比以不动食物为食的鸟类能看到更多自己的喙。但在非视觉引导觅食的鸟类中,喙和前部盲区之间没有一致的关系。我们讨论了不同的策略——宽双眼视野、大幅度眼球运动和长喙——这些策略可将前部盲区的潜在负面影响降至最低。总体而言,我们认为鸟类的双眼视觉有着比表面现象更多的内涵。