Literature DB >> 30357835

Colours and colour vision in reef fishes: Past, present and future research directions.

N Justin Marshall1, Fabio Cortesi1, Fanny de Busserolles1, Uli E Siebeck2, Karen L Cheney1,3.   

Abstract

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?"
© 2018 The Fisheries Society of the British Isles.

Entities:  

Keywords:  colour vision; reef fishes; visual ecology

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30357835     DOI: 10.1111/jfb.13849

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Fish Biol        ISSN: 0022-1112            Impact factor:   2.051


  6 in total

1.  The aesthetic value of reef fishes is globally mismatched to their conservation priorities.

Authors:  Juliette Langlois; François Guilhaumon; Florian Baletaud; Nicolas Casajus; Cédric De Almeida Braga; Valentine Fleuré; Michel Kulbicki; Nicolas Loiseau; David Mouillot; Julien P Renoult; Aliénor Stahl; Rick D Stuart Smith; Anne-Sophie Tribot; Nicolas Mouquet
Journal:  PLoS Biol       Date:  2022-06-07       Impact factor: 9.593

Review 2.  Evolution of pigment cells and patterns: recent insights from teleost fishes.

Authors:  David M Parichy
Journal:  Curr Opin Genet Dev       Date:  2021-03-17       Impact factor: 4.665

3.  Fate plasticity and reprogramming in genetically distinct populations of Danio leucophores.

Authors:  Victor M Lewis; Lauren M Saunders; Tracy A Larson; Emily J Bain; Samantha L Sturiale; Dvir Gur; Sarwat Chowdhury; Jessica D Flynn; Michael C Allen; Dimitri D Deheyn; Jennifer C Lee; Julian A Simon; Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz; David W Raible; David M Parichy
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2019-05-28       Impact factor: 11.205

4.  Pigment pattern morphospace of Danio fishes: evolutionary diversification and mutational effects.

Authors:  Braedan M McCluskey; Yipeng Liang; Victor M Lewis; Larissa B Patterson; David M Parichy
Journal:  Biol Open       Date:  2021-09-20       Impact factor: 2.422

5.  Sex and male breeding state predict intraspecific trait variation in mouth-brooding fishes.

Authors:  Janine E Abecia; Osmar J Luiz; David A Crook; Sam C Banks; Dion Wedd; Alison J King
Journal:  J Fish Biol       Date:  2022-06-21       Impact factor: 2.504

6.  Redirection of ambient light improves predator detection in a diurnal fish.

Authors:  Matteo Santon; Pierre-Paul Bitton; Jasha Dehm; Roland Fritsch; Ulrike K Harant; Nils Anthes; Nico K Michiels
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2020-01-22       Impact factor: 5.349

  6 in total

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