Queensland Brain Institute, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, QLD 4072, Australia.
Centre for Advanced Imaging, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, QLD 4072, Australia.
Curr Biol. 2022 Jan 10;32(1):97-110.e4. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2021.10.070. Epub 2021 Nov 18.
Octopods are masters of camouflage and solve complex tasks, and their cognitive ability is said to approach that of some small mammals. Despite intense interest and some research progress, much of our knowledge of octopus neuroanatomy and its links to behavior and ecology comes from one coastal species, the European common octopus, Octopus vulgaris. Octopod species are found in habitats including complex coral reefs and the relatively featureless mid-water. There they encounter different selection pressures, may be nocturnal or diurnal, and are mostly solitary or partially social. How these different ecologies and behavioral differences influence the octopus central nervous system (CNS) remains largely unknown. Here we present a phylogenetically informed comparison between diurnal and nocturnal coastal and a deep-sea species using brain imaging techniques. This study shows that characteristic neuroanatomical changes are linked to their habits and habitats. Enlargement and division of the optic lobe as well as structural foldings and complexity in the underlying CNS are linked to behavioral adaptation (diurnal versus nocturnal; social versus solitary) and ecological niche (reef versus deep sea), but phylogeny may play a part also. The difference between solitary and social life is mirrored within the brain including the formation of multiple compartments (gyri) in the vertical lobe, which is likened to the vertebrate cortex. These findings continue the case for convergence between cephalopod and vertebrate brain structure and function. Notably, within the current push toward comparisons of cognitive abilities, often with unashamed anthropomorphism at their root, these findings provide a firm grounding from which to work.
章鱼是伪装大师,能够解决复杂的任务,它们的认知能力据说接近某些小型哺乳动物。尽管人们对章鱼的神经解剖学及其与行为和生态学的联系非常感兴趣,并取得了一些研究进展,但我们的大部分知识仍然来自于一种沿海物种——普通章鱼(Octopus vulgaris)。章鱼分布在多种栖息地中,包括复杂的珊瑚礁和相对无特征的中层水域。在这些不同的栖息地中,章鱼面临着不同的选择压力,可能是夜间活动或日间活动,大多数是独居或部分群居。这些不同的生态和行为差异如何影响章鱼的中枢神经系统(CNS)在很大程度上尚不清楚。在这里,我们使用脑成像技术对日间和夜间的沿海和深海物种进行了系统发生信息比较。这项研究表明,特征性的神经解剖学变化与它们的习惯和栖息地有关。视神经叶的放大和分裂,以及底层中枢神经系统的结构折叠和复杂性,与行为适应(日间与夜间;独居与群居)和生态位(珊瑚礁与深海)有关,但系统发生也可能起作用。独居和群居生活的差异在大脑中得到了反映,包括垂直叶中多个脑回(脑回)的形成,这类似于脊椎动物的大脑皮层。这些发现进一步证明了头足类动物和脊椎动物的大脑结构和功能之间存在趋同现象。值得注意的是,在当前对认知能力进行比较的热潮中,通常以其根源为基础的毫不掩饰的拟人化,这些发现为我们提供了一个坚实的基础。