Literature DB >> 12422215

Adaptive visual metamorphosis in a deep-sea hydrothermal vent crab.

Robert N Jinks1, Tara L Markley, Elizabeth E Taylor, Gina Perovich, Ana I Dittel, Charles E Epifanio, Thomas W Cronin.   

Abstract

Hydrothermal vents along the mid-ocean ridges host ephemeral ecosystems of diverse endemic fauna including several crustacean species, some of which undergo planktonic development as larvae up to 1,000 m above and 100 km away from the vents. Little is known about the role of vision in the life history of vent fauna. Here we report that planktonic zoea larvae of the vent crab Bythograea thermydron possess image-forming compound eyes with a visual pigment sensitive to the blue light of mesopelagic waters. As they metamorphose and begin to descend to and settle at the vents, they lose their image-forming optics and develop high-sensitivity naked-retina eyes. The spectral absorbance of the visual pigment in these eyes shifts towards longer wavelengths from larva to postlarva to adult. This progressive visual metamorphosis trades imaging for increased sensitivity, and changes spectral sensitivity from the blue wavelengths of the larval environment towards the dim, longer wavelengths produced in the deeper bathypelagic vent environment of the adults. As hydrothermal vents produce light, vision may supplement thermal and chemical senses to orient postlarval settlement at vent sites.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12422215     DOI: 10.1038/nature01144

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  8 in total

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7.  Pelagic organisms avoid white, blue, and red artificial light from scientific instruments.

Authors:  Maxime Geoffroy; Tom Langbehn; Pierre Priou; Øystein Varpe; Geir Johnsen; Arnault Le Bris; Jonathan A D Fisher; Malin Daase; David McKee; Jonathan Cohen; Jørgen Berge
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8.  The complete mitogenome of Phymorhynchus sp. (Neogastropoda, Conoidea, Raphitomidae) provides insights into the deep-sea adaptive evolution of Conoidea.

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  8 in total

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