Behavioural red-light sensitivity in fish according to the optomotor response

Author:

Matsuo Megumi1ORCID,Kamei Yasuhiro23ORCID,Fukamachi Shoji1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Evolutionary Genetics, Department of Chemical and Biological Sciences, Japan Women's University, Tokyo 112-8681, Japan

2. Spectrography and Bioimaging Facility, National Institute for Basic Biology, Aichi 444-8585, Japan

3. Department of Basic Biology, School of Life Science, The Graduate University for Advanced Studies (SOKENDAI), Aichi 444-8585, Japan

Abstract

Various procedures have been adopted to investigate spectral sensitivity of animals, e.g. absorption spectra of visual pigments, electroretinography, optokinetic response, optomotor response (OMR) and phototaxis. The use of these techniques has led to various conclusions about animal vision. However, visual sensitivity should be evaluated consistently for a reliable comparison. In this study, we retrieved behavioural data of several fish species using a single OMR procedure and compared their sensitivities to near-infrared light. Besides cavefish that lack eyes, some species were not appropriate for the OMR test because they either stayed still or changed swimming direction frequently. Eight of 13 fish species tested were OMR positive. Detailed analyses using medaka, goldfish, zebrafish, guppy, stickleback and cichlid revealed that all the fish were sensitive to light at a wavelength greater than or equal to 750 nm, where the threshold wavelengths varied from 750 to 880 nm. Fish opsin repertoire affected the perception of red light. By contrast, the copy number of long-wavelength-sensitive ( LWS ) genes did not necessarily improve red-light sensitivity. While the duplication of LWS and other cone opsin genes that has occurred extensively during fish evolution might not aid increasing spectral sensitivity, it may provide some other advantageous ophthalmic function, such as enhanced spectral discrimination.

Funder

Joint Research by the National Institutes of Natural Sciences

Tsuji Foundation of Japan Women's University

Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (C) from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

National Institute for Basic Biology's Collaborative Research Program

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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