Vision in sharks and rays: Opsin diversity and colour vision

Published on
22. April 2020

Vision in sharks and rays: Opsin diversity and colour vision

Nathan S.Hart

ABSTRACT:

The visual sense of elasmobranch fishes is poorly studied compared to their bony cousins, the teleosts. Nevertheless, the elasmobranch eye features numerous specialisations that have no doubt facilitated the diversification and evolutionary success of this fascinating taxon. In this review, I highlight recent discoveries on the nature and phylogenetic distribution of visual pigments in sharks and rays. Whereas most rays appear to be cone dichromats, all sharks studied to date are cone monochromats and, as a group, have likely abandoned colour vision on multiple occasions. This situation in sharks mirrors that seen in other large marine predators, the pinnipeds and cetaceans, which leads us to reassess the costs and benefits of multiple cone pigments and wavelength discrimination in the marine environment.

Seminars in Cell & Developmental Biology, DOI: 10.1016/j.semcdb.2020.03.012

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