Queensland Brain Institute, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, Queensland 4072, Australia.
Queensland Brain Institute, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, Queensland 4072, Australia; School of Biological Sciences, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, Queensland 4072, Australia.
Semin Cell Dev Biol. 2020 Oct;106:31-42. doi: 10.1016/j.semcdb.2020.06.007. Epub 2020 Jun 24.
Coral reefs are one of the most species rich and colourful habitats on earth and for many coral reef teleosts, vision is central to their survival and reproduction. The diversity of reef fish visual systems arises from variations in ocular and retinal anatomy, neural processing and, perhaps most easily revealed by, the peak spectral absorbance of visual pigments. This review examines the interplay between retinal morphology and light environment across a number of reef fish species, but mainly focusses on visual adaptations at the molecular level (i.e. visual pigment structure). Generally, visual pigments tend to match the overall light environment or micro-habitat, with fish inhabiting greener, inshore waters possessing longer wavelength-shifted visual pigments than open water blue-shifted species. In marine fishes, particularly those that live on the reef, most species have between two (likely dichromatic) to four (possible tetrachromatic) cone spectral sensitivities and a single rod for crepuscular vision; however, most are trichromatic with three spectral sensitivities. In addition to variation in spectral sensitivity number, spectral placement of the absorbance maximum (λ) also has a surprising degree of variability. Variation in ocular and retinal anatomy is also observed at several levels in reef fishes but is best represented by differences in arrangement, density and distribution of neural cell types across the retina (i.e. retinal topography). Here, we focus on the seven reef fish families most comprehensively studied to date to examine and compare how behaviour, environment, activity period, ontogeny and phylogeny might interact to generate the exceptional diversity in visual system design that we observe.
珊瑚礁是地球上物种最丰富、颜色最鲜艳的栖息地之一,对于许多珊瑚礁鱼类来说,视觉是它们生存和繁殖的关键。珊瑚鱼视觉系统的多样性源于眼球和视网膜解剖结构、神经处理的差异,而视觉色素的最大光谱吸收峰最容易揭示这些差异。本文综述了多种珊瑚鱼物种中视网膜形态与光环境之间的相互作用,但主要集中在分子水平上的视觉适应(即视觉色素结构)。一般来说,视觉色素往往与整体光环境或微生境相匹配,栖息在较绿、近岸水域的鱼类拥有比开阔水域蓝移物种更长波长偏移的视觉色素。在海洋鱼类中,特别是那些生活在珊瑚礁上的鱼类,大多数鱼类具有两种(可能是二色性)到四种(可能是四色性)的锥状光谱敏感性和一个用于黄昏视觉的棒状细胞;然而,大多数鱼类具有三种光谱敏感性,属于三色性。除了光谱敏感性数量的变化外,吸收最大值(λ)的光谱位置也具有惊人的可变性。在几种珊瑚鱼中也观察到眼球和视网膜解剖结构的变化,但在视网膜上神经细胞类型的排列、密度和分布(即视网膜拓扑)的差异最能代表这种变化。在这里,我们重点研究了迄今为止研究最全面的七种珊瑚鱼科,以研究和比较行为、环境、活动期、个体发育和系统发育如何相互作用,产生我们观察到的视觉系统设计的非凡多样性。