Queensland Brain Institute, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
School of Biomedical Sciences, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
J Fish Biol. 2019 Jul;95(1):5-38. doi: 10.1111/jfb.13849. Epub 2018 Dec 10.
Many fishes, both freshwater or marine, have colour vision that may outperform humans. As a result, to understand the behavioural tasks that vision enables; including mate choice, feeding, agonistic behaviour and camouflage, we need to see the world through a fish's eye. This includes quantifying the variable light environment underwater and its various influences on vision. As well as rapid loss of light with depth, light attenuation underwater limits visual interaction to metres at most and in many instances, less than a metre. We also need to characterize visual sensitivities, fish colours and behaviours relative to both these factors. An increasingly large set of techniques over the past few years, including improved photography, submersible spectrophotometers and genetic sequencing, have taken us from intelligent guesswork to something closer to sensible hypotheses. This contribution to the special edition on the Ecology of Fish Senses under a shifting environment first reviews our knowledge of fish colour vision and visual ecology, past, present and very recent, and then goes on to examine how climate change may impinge on fish visual capability. The review is limited to mostly colour vision and to mostly reef fishes. This ignores a large body of work, both from other marine environments and freshwater systems, but the reef contains examples of many of the challenges to vision from the aquatic environment. It is also a concentrate of life, perhaps the most specious and complex on earth, suffering now catastrophically from the consequences of our lack of action on climate change. A clear course of action to prevent destruction of this habitat is the need to spend more time in it, in the study of it and sharing it with those not fortunate enough to see coral reefs first-hand. Sir David Attenborough on The Great Barrier Reef: "Do we really care so little about the Earth upon which we live that we don't wish to protect one of its greatest wonders from the consequences of our behaviours?"
许多鱼类,无论是淡水鱼还是海鱼,都具有可能优于人类的色觉。因此,为了了解视觉所能实现的行为任务,包括配偶选择、进食、争斗行为和伪装,我们需要通过鱼类的视角来看世界。这包括量化水下可变的光照环境及其对视觉的各种影响。除了随深度的快速光衰减外,水下的光衰减限制了视觉相互作用,最多只能达到几米,在许多情况下,不到一米。我们还需要根据这两个因素来描述视觉敏感度、鱼类颜色和行为。在过去的几年中,一系列越来越多的技术,包括改进的摄影技术、潜水分光光度计和基因测序,使我们从智能猜测到更接近合理假设。这篇为环境变化下鱼类感官生态学特刊撰写的文章,首先回顾了我们对鱼类色觉和视觉生态学的了解,包括过去、现在和最近的研究,然后探讨了气候变化可能如何影响鱼类的视觉能力。该综述主要限于色觉和珊瑚礁鱼类。这忽略了大量的工作,包括来自其他海洋环境和淡水系统的工作,但珊瑚礁包含了许多来自水生环境的视觉挑战的例子。它也是生命的聚集地,也许是地球上最丰富多彩和最复杂的,现在正遭受着我们对气候变化缺乏行动的灾难性后果。防止破坏这种栖息地的明确行动方针是需要更多地在其中花费时间,研究它并与那些没有幸运地亲眼看到珊瑚礁的人分享它。大卫·爱登堡爵士在《大堡礁》中说:“我们真的对我们赖以生存的地球如此漠不关心,以至于我们不愿意保护地球上最伟大的奇观之一免受我们行为的后果吗?”