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深海鱼类的超黑伪装

Ultra-black Camouflage in Deep-Sea Fishes.

机构信息

Department of Biology, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708, USA.

Department of Life Sciences, The Natural History Museum, London SW7 5BD, UK.

出版信息

Curr Biol. 2020 Sep 7;30(17):3470-3476.e3. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2020.06.044. Epub 2020 Jul 16.

Abstract

At oceanic depths >200 m, there is little ambient sunlight, but bioluminescent organisms provide another light source that can reveal animals to visual predators and prey [1-4]. Transparency and mirrored surfaces-common camouflage strategies under the diffuse solar illumination of shallower waters-are conspicuous when illuminated by directed bioluminescent sources due to reflection from the body surface [5, 6]. Pigmentation allows animals to absorb light from bioluminescent sources, rendering them visually undetectable against the dark background of the deep sea [5]. We present evidence suggesting pressure to reduce reflected bioluminescence led to the evolution of ultra-black skin (reflectance <0.5%) in 16 species of deep-sea fishes across seven distantly related orders. Histological data suggest this low reflectance is mediated by a continuous layer of densely packed melanosomes in the exterior-most layer of the dermis [7, 8] and that this layer lacks the unpigmented gaps between pigment cells found in other darkly colored fishes [9-13]. Using finite-difference, time-domain modeling and comparisons with melanosomes found in other ectothermic vertebrates [11, 13-21], we find the melanosomes making up the layer in these ultra-black species are optimized in size and shape to minimize reflectance. Low reflectance results from melanosomes scattering light within the layer, increasing the optical path length and therefore light absorption by the melanin. By reducing reflectance, ultra-black fish can reduce the sighting distance of visual predators more than 6-fold compared to fish with 2% reflectance. This biological example of efficient light absorption via a simple architecture of strongly absorbing and highly scattering particles may inspire new ultra-black materials.

摘要

在超过 200 米的海洋深处,几乎没有环境光线,但生物发光生物体提供了另一种光源,可以将动物暴露给视觉上的捕食者和猎物[1-4]。在较浅水域漫射太阳光的照射下,透明度和镜面表面是常见的伪装策略,但当被定向生物发光源照亮时,由于来自体表的反射,这些策略会变得明显[5,6]。色素使动物能够吸收生物发光源的光,从而使它们在深海的黑暗背景下无法被视觉察觉[5]。我们提供的证据表明,由于来自生物发光源的反射光减少的压力,导致在七个远缘的深海鱼类目中的 16 种深海鱼类中进化出了超黑皮肤(反射率<0.5%)。组织学数据表明,这种低反射率是由真皮最外层中密集排列的黑色素体连续层介导的[7,8],并且该层缺乏在其他深色鱼类中发现的色素细胞之间未着色的间隙[9-13]。使用有限差分、时域建模并与其他变温脊椎动物中的黑色素体进行比较[11,13-21],我们发现这些超黑物种中组成该层的黑色素体在尺寸和形状上进行了优化,以将反射率降至最低。低反射率是由于黑色素体在层内散射光,增加了光程长度,从而增加了黑色素的光吸收。通过降低反射率,与反射率为 2%的鱼类相比,超黑鱼类可以将视觉捕食者的发现距离减少 6 倍以上。这种通过强吸收和高度散射颗粒的简单结构实现高效光吸收的生物实例可能会激发新的超黑材料。

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