Abstract

The keen visual systems of birds have been relatively well-studied. The foundations of avian vision rest on their cone and rod photoreceptors. Most birds use four cone photoreceptor types for color vision, a fifth cone for achromatic tasks, and a rod for dim-light vision. The cones, along with their oil droplets, and rods are conserved across birds – with the exception of a few shifts in spectral sensitivity – despite taxonomic, behavioral and ecological differences. Here, however, we describe a novel photoreceptor organelle in a group of New World flycatchers (Empidonax spp.) in which the traditional oil droplet is replaced with a complex of electron-dense megamitochondria surrounded by hundreds of small, orange oil droplets. The photoreceptors with this organelle were unevenly distributed across the retina, being present in the central region (including in the fovea), but absent from the retinal periphery and the area temporalis of these insectivorous birds. Of the many bird species with their photoreceptors characterized, only the two flycatchers described here (E. virescens and E. minimus) possess this unusual retinal structure. We discuss the potential functional significance of this unique sub-cellular structure, which might provide an additional visual channel for these small predatory songbirds.

Highlights

  • The keen visual systems of birds have been relatively well-studied

  • We report the discovery of a photoreceptor that contains a cellular organelle not reported before in this form in any other vertebrate retina. We found this photoreceptor in two species of New World flycatchers of the genus Empidonax (E. virescens and E. minimus)

  • We found that Empidonax flycatchers, like all birds, had four single cone photoreceptors that each contained a spherical oil droplet in the inner segment of the photoreceptor

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Summary

Introduction

The keen visual systems of birds have been relatively well-studied. The foundations of avian vision rest on their cone and rod photoreceptors. We report the discovery of a photoreceptor that contains a cellular organelle not reported before in this form in any other vertebrate retina We found this photoreceptor in two species of New World flycatchers of the genus Empidonax (E. virescens and E. minimus). We describe this new cellular structure using light microscopy and transmission electron microscopy, analyze its spectral composition using microspectrophotometry, and establish the distribution and densities of these novel cones relative to the traditional cones across the retina. We displayed the presence/absence of this cellular structure in the avian phylogeny based on species whose cones and oil droplets have been previously characterized Overall, this cellular structure may allow these sit-and-wait flycatchers to see their world in a different way from other animals

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