Adapt or die. The theory of natural selection favors individuals in a population who are the fittest. The fastest cheetahs catch the most gazelle, the quickest diving hawks seize the most field mice, and the surface dwelling fish with the superior eye sight feeds on the most insects. Access to limited resources ensures that the fittest genetic material will be passed on to generation to come. The fishes of the genus Anableps have eyes adapted for optimal function when bisected horizontally by the surface of the water. Due to this characteristic, there are two separate regions to each eye. This phenotype has developed from the genotypic advantage attributed to individuals with eyes that are dorsally located close together, so they are superlatively adapted for catching prey. The four eyed fish? No, they do not wear glasses, but literally the appearance of four eyes in Anableps is due to two distinct optical systems in each eye. There are structural and macromolecular differences in both dorsal and ventral corneas, but the distinction between two eyes and four becomes unclear when simply looking at the fish.
In the order Cyprinodontiformes and family Anablepidae, there are three species of fish in the genus Anableps. The Anableps species are described as being neither primitive nor particularly advanced and are found evolutionarily between Ostariophysi and Perciformes (Schwab, 2001). The species Anableps anableps (A. anableps) is found in South America from Trinidad and Venezuela to the Amazon delta in Brazil, and live in both freshwater and brackish water ecosystems (Nelson, 1994). The species Anableps dowei (A. dowei) is found in Central America, and it is distributed in Pacific drainages, from southern Mexico to Nicaragua. A. dowei can be found in freshwater, brackish, and marine environments (Nelson, 1994). Lastly, the species Anableps microlepis (A. microlepis) is found in Central and South America from Trinidad and Venezuela to the Amazon delta in Brazil, and is found in freshwater and brackish water (Nelson, 1994). All three species have similar environmental conditions, and their eyes have adapted in virtually the exact same way (Schwab, 2001). Anableps are able to keep their body and the ventral portion of their large eyes submerged, while the dorsal portion of the eyes are exposed to the surface of the water. These morphological characteristics are why these species are named to be in the genus Anableps. The word Anableps derives from the root “ana” meaning up, and the root “bleps” meaning glance or sight (Nelson, 1994).
Eyes of Anableps anableps Photo by Andreas Werth Flickr.com |
The unique eyes of Anableps
have raised many questions about how they function, and what causes them to be
different. Why is there an illusion of
four eyes? Anableps fish have the ability to see above and below the water at
the same time. Each eye contains two
pupillary apertures and a divided cornea.
The aerial pupil is larger than the aquatic pupil. The eye prevents a double image from forming
through an iris flap that divides the apertures in two across the midline (Schwab,
2001). There are two retinas, each
containing a single optic nerve. The
ventral retina is larger and thicker, and contains double the number of cones
compared to the thinner dorsal retina. The dorsal retina receives upwelling light
filtered through water and dissolved solutes that alter spectral content, and
the ventral retina receives aerial light unfiltered by water (Owens, 2012). The eyes must receive broad-spectrum light from
the surface, and dimmer, narrow-spectrum light from under water. Wavelength sensitivity differs in the dorsal
and ventral retinas of each eye, enabling Anableps
to use their photoreceptors according to which region the light is received
from. The enhanced sensitivity is
advantageous to Anableps in the
brackish waters of the mangrove forests and river deltas, as these often
contain dissolved organic matter that shifts light abundance to longer
wavelengths (Owens, 2012).
The variations between the dorsal and ventral region
of each eye have proven that the dorsal region is more essential. By recording electrical discharges in the
optic tectum in response to a small optic stimulus in the visual field, the
dorsal system shows to have better acuity, and it is more important to the
species (Schwab, 2001). The corneas of
the eye display that there is roughly twenty layers of epithelial cells in the
dorsal cornea, while the relatively thin ventral cornea contains about five epithelial
cell layers. The thicker layer of cells
in the dorsal cornea accounts for the fact that it is positioned facing upward
and directly exposed to the sunlight. A
greater number of epithelial cells may provide additional chromophores to
absorb UV light (Swamynathan, 2003). The
vast adaptation of the epithelial cells enhances the argument that Anableps eyes are supremely adapted to
their specific environment and surface feeding.
When compared to a common, constantly submerged fish, such
as Danio rerio (zebrafish), the full
structural and macromolecular differences in A. Anableps may be accounted for.
Anableps have developed many
morphological adaptations to become excellent surface feeders, specifically
pertaining to their vision. In addition
to having an abnormally thick dorsal corneal epithelial layer, they also have a
high concentration of glycogen in the dorsal corneal epithelium. Corneal epithelial cell glucose and glycogen
concentrations have been shown to increase upon exposure to UV radiation,
suggesting Anableps dorsal corneal epithelial
cells accumulate glycogen in response to UV radiation. The thickness also aids with aerial vision through
a refractive role, and protects against desiccation when exposed to air because
Anableps lack a tear layer and eye
lids (Swamynathan, 2003). This
remarkable feat allows Anableps to
remain at the surface of the water for the maximum amount of time before having
to submerge to moisten the epithelium and wet the gills. Dissimilar to Anableps, Danio rerio
must always swim below the water surface, using only aquatic vision.
Anableps will
feed above the water surface, at the water surface, and in the water column. They use their aerial vision to leap out of
the water and attack insects, and they use aquatic vision to eat smaller
fish. Although they have excellent
aerial vision, they must still evade predators.
While feeding on the surface, Anableps
expose their light underside, making themselves vulnerable to aquatic
predators. They are also susceptible to
prey by terrestrial predators when swimming along the surface. Anableps
have developed several strategies to escape predators. The first includes quick evasion by either
submerging to the bottom, or jumping out of the water. Their eyes can function under water so they
have the option of swimming below the surface without being impaired (Nelson,
1994). Schooling tactics allow these
fish to feed in inundated mangrove forests and move by way of tidal migration
to utilize available food (Brenner, 2007).
While feeding together, they react according to how others in the school
react, allowing there to be a less likely chance that an individual will be
picked out by a predator. Additionally, moving
with the tide, Anableps can use the
water depth so that they do not end up exposed to predators in shallow water (Schwab,
2001). Whether Anableps will evolve four true eyes is an evolutionary mystery, but
it would support the idea that the populations we are
witnessing today have evolved from two eyes, and are on their way to becoming
the fittest population possible with four eyes.
References
Brenner, M., & Krumme, U.
(2007). Tidal migration and patterns in feeding of the four-eyed fish Anableps anableps L. in a north Brazilian
mangrove. Journal of Fish Biology, 70, 406-427.
Nelson, J. S. (1994). Family
Anablepidae - Four-eyed fishes, onesided livebearers & white-eye. FishBase..
Owens, L. G., Rennison, D.,
Allison, W. T., & Taylor, J. S. (2012). In the four-eyed fish (Anableps anableps), the regions of the retina exposed
to aquatic and aerial light do not express the same set of opsin genes. Biology Letters, 8, 86-89
.
Schwab, R. I., Ho, V., Roth,
A., Blankenship, T. N., & Fitzgerald, P.G. (2001). Evolutionary attempts at four eyes in vertebrates. Transactions of the
American Ophthalmic Society, 99, 145-157.
Swamynathan, K. S., Crawford,
M. A., Robison, W. G., Kanungo, J., & Piatigorsky, J. (2003). Adaptive differences in the structure and
macromolecular compositions of the air and water corneas of the “four-eyed”
fish (Anableps anableps). The Journal of the Federation American Societies for
Experimental Biology, 17, 1996-2005.
What solid post this is for me and usually posts some really exciting stuff like this. If you’re new to this site..Optical Express Evade ugly mascara smirches on your glasses lenses by essentially twisting your eyelashes – which will additionally add a few marvelous additional shows to your look. The shape and meaning of eyebrows can truly change your face, and will clean up the look of glasses-wearers.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDelete