Abstract

BackgroundWrasses represent the second largest family of marine fishes and display a high diversity of complex colours linked to ecological functions. Recently, red autofluorescent body colouration has been reported in some of these fishes. However, little is known about the distribution of such fluorescent body patterns in wrasses or the animals’ ability to perceive such colours.ResultsAgainst this background, we (1) investigated long-wavelength emission autofluorescence in thirteen species of pseudocheilinid wrasses and (2) characterised the spectral absorbance of visual pigments in one of the examined species, the fairy wrasse Cirrhilabrus solorensis. Spectrophotometric analysis revealed that fluorescent body colouration is widespread and diverse within this clade, with considerable variation in both fluorescent pattern and maximum emission wavelength between species. Characterisation of visual pigments in retinal photoreceptors showed a single class of rod and three spectrally distinct cone photoreceptors, suggesting possible trichromacy.ConclusionCombining the emission characteristics of fluorescence body colouration and the spectral sensitivity data of retinal cells suggests that the visual system of C. solorensis is sensitive to pseudocheilinid fluorescence.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12983-016-0145-1) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Wrasses represent the second largest family of marine fishes and display a high diversity of complex colours linked to ecological functions

  • Peak fluorescence emission in all 13 species examined ranged from 641 nm in Cirrhilabrus rubrisquamis [37] to 669 nm in Paracheilinus carpenteri [38] and Pseudocheilinus hexataenia [39]

  • We modelled the fit to the mean spectra of a combination of two A1-based visual pigments

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Wrasses represent the second largest family of marine fishes and display a high diversity of complex colours linked to ecological functions. Wrasses (Labridae) represent the second largest marine fish family, containing more than 600 species within 82 genera [1]. Wrasses display a staggering diversity of complex colours virtually unique to this family [6, 7] These colours have been linked to important ecological functions such as camouflage and aggressive mimicry [8], interspecific signalling [9] as well as courtship and male competition [10,11,12].

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call