Abstract

For evolutionary ecologists, the “holy grail” of visual ecology is to establish an unambiguous link between photoreceptor sensitivity, the spectral environment, and the perception of specific visual stimuli (e.g., mates, food, predators, etc.). Due to the bright nuptial colors of the males, and the role female mate choice plays in their evolution, the haplochromine cichlid fishes of the African great lakes are favorite research subjects for such investigations. Despite this attention, current evidence is equivocal; while distinct correlations among photoreceptor sensitivity, photic environment, and male coloration exist in Lake Victorian haplochromines, attempts to find such correlations in Lake Malawian cichlids have failed. Lake Malawi haplochromines have a wide variability in their short-wavelength-sensitive photoreceptors, especially compared to their mid- and long-wavelength-sensitive photoreceptors; these cichlids also vary in the degree to which they express one of three basic color patterns (vertical bars, horizontal stripes, and solid patches of colors), each of which is likely used in a different form of communication. Thus, we hypothesize that, in these fishes, spectral sensitivity and color pattern have evolved in a correlated fashion to maximize visual communication; specifically, ultraviolet sensitivity should be found in vertically-barred species to promote ‘private’ communication, while striped species should be less likely to have ultraviolet sensitivity, since their color pattern carries ‘public’ information. Using phylogenetic independent contrasts, we found that barred species had strong sensitivity to ultraviolet wavelengths, but that striped species typically lacked sensitivity to ultraviolet light. Further, the only variable, even when environmental variables were simultaneously considered, that could predict ultraviolet sensitivity was color pattern. We also found that, using models of correlated evolution, color pattern and ultraviolet sensitivity are correlated in Lake Malawi cichlid evolution, with the likely ancestor being a vertically-barred, ultraviolet-sensitive species, the descendants of which lost both ultraviolet sensitivity and a barred color pattern. These results, indicating that communication of ‘public’ and ‘private’ signals is mediated via differing perceptions of color patterns, suggest a functional connection between visual sensitivity and colour pattern, a novel finding in Lake Malawi cichlids.

Highlights

  • For those who study the ecology of vision, the “holy grail” of such studies is to discover an unambiguous link among photoreceptor sensitivity, the wavelengths of light available within the study organism’s habitat, and the perception of ecologically relevant visual stimuli, such as food, predators, or mates (Ryan and Rand, 1990; Endler, 1992; van Staaden and Smith, 2011)

  • The ANOVA results indicate that of the five independent variables, only color pattern predicts the peak sensitivity of the short wavelength sensitive (SWS) photoreceptor expressed in the single cones of cichlid retinae (Table 3A)

  • Among coral reef fishes, UV-sensitive visual systems are important in species recognition (Côté and Cheney, 2005; Cheney and Marshall, 2009; Siebeck et al, 2010), and are sensitive to species-specific within-color pattern contrast (Losey, 2003; Siebeck et al, 2010); UV-sensitive species are better able to discriminate between helpful “cleaner” species and their harmful mimics, largely due to distinctive UV reflectivity in the mimics’ color patterns (Côté and Cheney, 2005; Cheney and Marshall, 2009)

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Summary

Introduction

For those who study the ecology of vision, the “holy grail” of such studies is to discover an unambiguous link among photoreceptor sensitivity, the wavelengths of light available within the study organism’s habitat, and the perception of ecologically relevant visual stimuli, such as food, predators, or mates (Ryan and Rand, 1990; Endler, 1992; van Staaden and Smith, 2011). This is, a convenient “shorthand” view of how vision works in animals, one that overlooks the complex relationships and interactions among photons, opsins, neurons, and the resulting image constructed by the organism’s brain (Endler, 1990, 1991; Fernald, 2006). In the most comprehensive such study on Malawian cichlids, Dalton et al (2010) fail to find any correlation among sensitivity, photic environment, and coloration; they found that depth does not influence the perceptibility of cichlid hues, suggesting that depth may not have an influence on photoreceptor sensitivity

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