Vision in two sympatric species of Pullosquilla (stomatopoda, lysiosquilloidea) living in different depth ranges

Citation
Pa. Jutte et al., Vision in two sympatric species of Pullosquilla (stomatopoda, lysiosquilloidea) living in different depth ranges, MAR FRESH B, 31(4), 1998, pp. 231-250
Citations number
30
Categorie Soggetti
Aquatic Sciences
Journal title
MARINE AND FRESHWATER BEHAVIOUR AND PHYSIOLOGY
ISSN journal
10236244 → ACNP
Volume
31
Issue
4
Year of publication
1998
Pages
231 - 250
Database
ISI
SICI code
1023-6244(1998)31:4<231:VITSSO>2.0.ZU;2-S
Abstract
We examined the visual systems of two species of the lysiosquilloid stomato pod crustacean genus Pullosquilla living sympatrically in waters around the island of Moorea, French Polynesia. P. litoralis lives in bright, shallow environments to a maximum depth of less than 2m, while P. thomassini occupi es depths to at least 37 m. By occupying different environments in the same geographic regions, the closely related species pair affords a rare opport unity to examine the effect of photic environment on visual evolutionary ad aptation. We quantified retinal anatomy, determined the spectral diversity of visual pigments, and measured the absorption spectra of intrarhabdomal f ilters in retinas of both species to compare their complements of spectral receptors. The two species were similar in most respects, but the visual pi gment in the main retina of P. thomassini had lambda(max) at 467 nm, compar ed to 509 nm in the corresponding retinal region of P. litoralis. The absor ption of visual pigments in Row 3 of the midband, the region of the retina most sensitive to long wavelengths, could not be determined in P. thomassin i. but the intrarhabdomal filter of this row was transparent in a shorter-w avelength region than the Row 3 filter of P. litoralis, implying that long- wavelength sensitivity in this deeper-living species is blue-shifted compar ed to the shallow-living species. Overall, the visual system of P. thomassi ni appears better adapted to life in a dim, spectrally limited world.