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Developmental Changes in the Visual Pigments of the Yellowfin Tuna, Thunnus Albacares

49

Citations

27

References

2002

Year

Abstract

Previous studies have suggested that adult tunas have only two visual pigments in their retinas - a rod pigment with a wavelength at maximum absorbance (u max) around 485 nm and one with similar u max in both twin and single cones inferred from extraction data. Using microspectrophotometry we confirm the presence of a u max 483 nm visual pigment in the rods of adult yellowfin tuna and a u max 485 nm pigment in both members of the twin cones. However, all single cones contain a previously undetected violet visual pigment with u max 426 nm making the adult yellowfin tuna a photopic dichromat. The situation for larvae and early juveniles is different from that of the adults. The all single-cone retina of preflexion larvae shows a wide distribution in individual cone absorbances suggesting not only mixtures of the two adult cone pigments, but the presence of at least a third visual pigment with u max greater than 560 nm. With growth, the variation in cone absorbances decreases with convergence to the adult condition coincident with cone twinning. The significance of u max variability, multiple visual pigment expression and age-related differences are discussed in terms of the visual ecology of larval, juvenile and adult tunas.

References

YearCitations

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