|
|
|
|||
| Home Help Feedback Subscriptions Archive Search Table of Contents | ||||
First published online February 15, 2006
Journal of Experimental Biology 209, 781-788 (2006)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2006
doi: 10.1242/jeb.02060
Commentary |
Nocturnal colour vision not as rare as we might think
Department of Cell and Organism Biology, Vision Group, Lund University, Helgonavägen 3, S-22362 Lund, Sweden
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: almut.kelber{at}cob.lu.se)
Accepted 22 December 2005
| Summary |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Key words: vision, colour vision, sensitivity, colour constancy, night vision
| Preconditions for colour vision |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
In vertebrates, the situation is somewhat more complicated. Most of them
possess a dual retina consisting of rods used for vision in dim light and
cones used for vision in bright light. Only cones make a major contribution to
colour vision. At scotopic light intensities (below 0.005 cd
m2, see Fig.
1B) only rods contribute to (colour-blind) vision, and at photopic
light levels (above 5 cd m2), most vertebrates including
humans use only cones to see colour. At mesopic light levels both cones and
rods contribute and colours look less saturated
(Ambler and Proctor, 1976
).
Some vertebrates have pure rod retinae (e.g.
Douglas et al., 1998
), but most
have one type of rod and one (marine and some nocturnal mammals), two (the
majority of mammals), three (primates, and some fish, amphibians and reptiles)
or four (some fish, most reptiles and birds) types of cone (for a review see
Kelber et al., 2003b
). Lizards
have pure cone retinae (Underwood,
1970
).
Animal groups known to lack the preconditions for colour vision include
most deep-sea fish and crustaceans, most cephalopods, and some nocturnal and
marine mammals (for references see Douglas
et al., 1998
; Kelber et al.,
2003b
). Even mammals with two types of photoreceptor (a rod and a
cone) are most certainly colour-blind because they use one type, the rods, in
dim light and the other type, the cones, in bright light. To prove that an
animal uses colour vision, we need therefore to prove behaviourally that it is
able to discriminate two colours by means of their spectral distributions and
independent of their relative intensities
(Kelber et al., 2003b
).
| Adaptations to nocturnal colour vision |
|---|
|
|
|---|
n quanta, when an average n quanta reach the eye at
any one time interval. Discrimination of low contrasts is therefore severely
impaired at low light intensities, and the eyes of nocturnal animals increase
quantum capture by having large apertures and short focal lengths (for a
review, see Warrant,
2004
In lens eyes, high sensitivity is achieved by large pupils in combination
with a short focal length. Examples of nocturnal animals with highly sensitive
lens eyes include owl monkeys, owls, nocturnal geckos and many spiders. Large
lenses with short focal lengths suffer from a severe optical problem:
longitudinal chromatic aberration. Nocturnal vertebrates have probably solved
this problem by having multifocal optics associated with slit pupils
(Malmström and Kröger,
2006
). Multifocal lenses focus light of different wavelengths in
different spherical zones of the lens, thus producing a focussed image for
multiple types of cone, and the slit pupil allows light to fall through all
zones even when the pupil is closed
(Kröger et al., 1999
).
However, even if this allows for colour vision in photopic and mesopic light
intensities when cones are active, animals using a single type of rod in
scotopic intensities remain colour-blind at night.
|
Besides optical adaptations, nocturnal animals have photoreceptors with
large rhabdoms or outer segments (Figs
2D,
3A), and deep-sea fish have
banked retinae (for a review, see Warrant,
2004
). In addition, many nocturnal eyes have tapeta, mirrors
behind the receptor layer that reflect light that is not absorbed during the
first pass through the receptor and thus have the same effect as doubling the
length of the receptor (Land and Nilsson,
2002
). As a result of self-screening, long receptors have a much
broader spectral sensitivity than short receptors
(Warrant and Nilsson, 1998
).
They are more sensitive to light but the overlap between receptor
sensitivities also makes them less useful for spectral discrimination and thus
colour vision. Fig. 3B
illustrates the difference between the sensitivities of dark-adapted gecko
photoreceptors with outer segments of 5 µm and 50 µm length.
|
With very few photons available, pigment tuning also becomes essential, and
should maximise signal-to-noise ratio (for recent discussions of this topic,
see e.g. Douglas et al., 1998
;
Osorio and Vorobyev, 2005
) for
the visual system. Maximising photon catch and thus signal strength should
solve half of the problem, but nocturnal moths, for example, have pigments
sensitive to shorter wavelengths than those optimal for high photon catch
(Johnsen et al., 2006). Visual pigments of nocturnal geckos are also sensitive
to shorter wavelengths than those of related diurnal species
(Ellingson et al., 1995
;
Loew et al., 1996
), indicating
that minimising noise is indeed an important factor.
Finally, temporal and spatial summation of receptor signals by neurons in
the visual pathway can enhance the signal and improve signal-to-noise ratio
considerably (Warrant, 1999
;
Warrant et al., 2004
). In
contrast, inhibitory interactions between receptors, including those involved
in colour vision, lead to a lower signal-to-noise-ratio
(Vorobyev, 1997
). A single
long-wavelength receptor has, under most nocturnal conditions, a higher
sensitivity than either a short-wavelength-sensitive receptor or any
combination of both (Kelber et al.,
2003a
; Osorio and Vorobyev,
2005
; Johnsen et al., 2006). With very few photons available, a
monochromatic eye with an optimally tuned pigment can thus discriminate more
shades of colour simply by means of intensity contrast than can a dichromatic
or trichromatic eye (Vorobyev,
1997
). Many animals, including ourselves, therefore sacrifice
colour vision at night (Dusenbery,
1992
). However, as demonstrated below, spectral information is
just as useful at night as it is during day
(Kelber et al., 2002
;
Land and Osorio, 2003
; Johnsen
et al., 2006), and some animals capture enough photons to see colours even in
dim light.
| Nocturnal colour vision for object constancy |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
| Scotopic colour vision in crepuscular and nocturnal hawkmoths |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Using a method developed by von Frisch in 1914, we have recently
demonstrated colour vision in the crepuscular and nocturnal hawkmoths
Deilephila elpenor, Hyles lineata and Hyles gallii
(von Frisch, 1914
;
Kelber et al., 2002
;
Kelber et al., 2003a
). The
moths were trained to associate a reward of sucrose solution with the blue or
yellow colour of artificial flowers (Fig.
5A). After training, they were able to discriminate the training
colour from eight different shades of grey and from two other colours
(Fig. 5B,C). As the different
shades of grey provided different achromatic cues to the moths, they could
only rely on the chromatic signal (or colour) for the discrimination. They
were therefore unable to discriminate the training blue (or yellow) from a
lighter or darker shade of blue (or yellow, respectively), because these
stimuli differed only in the achromatic and not the chromatic signal (right
panels in Fig. 5B,C). The
results shown in Fig. 5 were
obtained at a light intensity similar to light levels on a starlit night
(0.0001 cd m2). Moths also discriminated between two colours
looking white to the human eye, one absorbing ultraviolet light and one
reflecting it (Kelber et al.,
2002
). This proves that the nocturnal colour vision of D.
elpenor also extends into the ultraviolet range. In addition, D.
elpenor has good colour constancy and is able to recognize rewarding
flowers under changed illumination
(Balkenius and Kelber,
2004
).
|
N equivalent to between 1 and 5 photons) would make
discrimination impossible. We therefore have to propose that nocturnal moths
use spatial and/or temporal summation
(Warrant, 1999
| Colour vision in nocturnal geckos |
|---|
|
|
|---|
It is difficult to convince geckos to use colour cues but it was possible
using a method similar to that used with nocturnal hawkmoths
(Roth and Kelber, 2004
). A
well-tasting cricket was presented in front of a blue pattern, and a salty
(badly-tasting) cricket in front of a grey pattern (inset in
Fig. 6). The shades of grey and
blue were made equally bright for the geckos, thus making discrimination by
means of achromatic cues very unlikely. To make intensity completely
unreliable for the geckos, we varied it between training trials leaving only
colour as the signal to be learned. Two geckos learned to discriminate between
both colours, at light intensities mimicking dim moonlight
(Fig. 6; 0.002 cd
m2). They might well be able to use colour even at lower
light intensities. Their anatomical adaptations thus allow nocturnal geckos to
use cone-based colour vision at night
(Roth and Kelber, 2004
). The
question as to why a predator should preserve and use colour vision, even in
dim light, remains to be answered. Most probably, object constancy is
important even for predators.
|
| Bioluminescence and colour vision |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Behavioural evidence is also lacking for firefly squids, but it is known
that these molluscs and some deep-sea crustaceans and fish possess two
receptor types that may allow them to discriminate between the colour of the
down-dwelling daylight and the colour of their bioluminescence (for references
see Kelber, in press
;
Douglas et al., 1998
).
Some deep-sea dragon fish have two-coloured bioluminescence in the blue and
far-red, and photoreceptors sensitive to the red fluorescence
(Douglas et al., 1998
). Whether
they compare signals from this red receptor and the blue-sensitive rod for
colour vision or just use the red receptor as a parallel channel may remain
their secret since these animals are difficult to access and hard if not
impossible to study in behavioural tests
(Douglas et al., 1998
). In
general, however, bioluminescent stimuli are bright, and the eyes of these
animals do not have to be quite as sensitive as those of nocturnal moths or
geckos.
| Other species might join the club |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Among the vertebrates, another nocturnal group besides the geckos might see
colour at night. In contrast to other vertebrates, toads and frogs have two
types of rod (Liebman and Entine,
1968
), maximally sensitive to 432 nm and 502 nm, respectively.
They use colour vision for mate recognition in bright light (for references,
see Kelber et al., 2003) and might use rod-based colour vision for the same
purpose in dim light. Alternatively, they might only use the achromatic signal
that results from summing the signals in both rods types. The latter has been
shown to be the case for the optomotor response in the green treefrog Hyla
cinerea (King et al.,
1993
). Finally, in some fish, the red-sensitive cones are more
sensitive to light than the other cone types and can interact with rods
(Roessel et al., 1997
). This
has been proved by classical conditioning experiments in anaesthetised
goldfish (Powers and Easter,
1978
) and it might apply to other species as well. It is, however,
unknown whether and how the chromatic signal derived from rods and red cones
is used by the fish.
| Conclusions |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Ambler, B. A. and Proctor, R. W. (1976). Rod involvement in peripheral color processing. Scand. J. Psychol. 17,142 -148.[Medline]
Balkenius, A. and Kelber, A. (2004). Colour
constancy in diurnal and nocturnal hawkmoths. J. Exp.
Biol. 207,3307
-3316.
Booth, D., Stewart, A. J. A. and Osorio, D.
(2004). Colour vision in the glow-worm Lampyris
noctiluca (L.) (Coleoptera: Lampyridae): evidence for a green-blue
chromatic mechanism. J. Exp. Biol.
207,2373
-2378.
Briscoe, A. D. and Chittka, L. (2001). Insect color vision. Annu. Rev. Entomol. 46,471 -510.[CrossRef][Medline]
Cronin, T. W. and Hariyama, T. (2002). Spectral sensitivity in crustacean eyes. In The Crustacean Nervous System (ed. K. Wiese), pp. 499-511. Berlin: Springer.
Douglas, R. H., Partridge, J. C. and Marshall, N. J. (1998). The eyes of deep-sea fish I: lens pigmentation, tapeta and visual pigments. Prog. Retin. Eye Res. 17,597 -636.[CrossRef][Medline]
Dusenbery, D. B. (1992). Sensory Ecology. New York: Freeman and Company.
Ellingson, J. M., Fleishman, L. J. and Loew, E. R. (1995). Visual pigments and spectral sensitivity of the diurnal gecko Gonatodes albogularis. J. Comp. Physiol. A 177,559 -567.[Medline]
Frisch, K. V. (1914). Der Farbensinn und Formensinn der Biene. Zool. Jahrb. Abt. Allg. Zool. Physiol. 35,1 -188.
Johnsen, S., Kelber, A., Warrant, E., Sweeney, A. M., Widder, E. A., Lee, R. L. and Hernandez-Andres, J. Twilight and nocturnal illumination and its effects on color perception by the nocturnal hawkmoth Deilephila elpenor. J. Exp. Biol. 209,789 -800.
Kelber, A. (In press). Invertebrate colour vision. In Invertebrate Vision (ed. E. J. Warrant and D.-E. Nilsson). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Kelber, A., Balkenius, A. and Warrant, E. J. (2002). Scotopic colour vision in nocturnal hawkmoths. Nature 419,922 -925.[CrossRef][Medline]
Kelber, A., Balkenius, A. and Warrant, E. J.
(2003a). Colour vision in diurnal and nocturnal hawkmoths.
Integr. Comp. Biol. 43,571
-579.
Kelber, A., Vorobyev, M. and Osorio, D. (2003b). Colour vision in animals behavioural tests and physiological concepts. Biol. Rev. 78, 81-118.[Medline]
King, R. B., Douglass, J. K., Philipps, J. B. and Baube, C. L. (1993). Scotopic spectral sensitivity of the optomotor response in the green treefrog Hyla cinerea. J. Exp. Zool. 267,40 -46.[CrossRef][Medline]
Kröger, R. H. H., Campbell, M. C. W., Fernald, R. D. and Wagner, H.-J. (1999). Multifocal lenses compensate for chromatic defocus in vertebrate eyes. J. Comp. Physiol. A 184,361 -369.[CrossRef][Medline]
Lall, A. B. and Worthy, K. M. (2000). Action spectra of the female's response in the firefly Photinus pyralis (Coleoptera: Lampyridae): evidence for an achromatic detection of the bioluminescent optical signal. J. Insect Physiol. 46,965 -968.[CrossRef][Medline]
Land, M. F. and Nilsson, D.-E. (2002). Animal Eyes. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Land, M. F. and Osorio, D. (2003). Colour vision: colouring the dark. Curr. Biol. 13,R83 -R85.[CrossRef][Medline]
Liebman, P. and Entine, G. (1968). Visual pigments of frog and tadpole (Rana pipens). Vision Res. 8,761 -775.[CrossRef][Medline]
Loew, E. R., Govardovskii, V. I., Röhlich, P. and Szél, A. (1996). Microspectrophotometric and immunocytochemical identification of ultraviolet photoreceptors in geckos. Vis. Neurosci. 13,247 -256.[Medline]
Malmström, T. and Kröger, R. H. H.
(2006). Pupil shapes and lens optics in the eyes of terrestrial
vertebrates. J. Exp. Biol.
209, 18-25.
Menzel, R. (1981). Achromatic vision in the honeybee at low light intensities. J. Comp. Physiol. A 141,389 -393.[CrossRef]
Michinomae, M. and Masuda, H. (1994). Structural basis for wavelength discrimination in the banked retina of the firefly squid Watasenia scintillans. J. Exp. Biol. 193,1 -12.[Abstract]
Osorio, D. and Vorobyev, M. (2005). Photoreceptor spectral sensitivities in terrestrial animals: adaptations for luminance and colour vision. Proc. R. Soc. Lond. B 272,1745 -1752.[Medline]
Powers, M. K. and Easter, S. S. (1978). Wavelength discrimination by the goldfish near absolute visual threshold. Vision Res. 18,1149 -1154.[CrossRef][Medline]
Roessel, P. V., Palacios, A. G. and Goldsmith, T. H. (1997). Activity of long-wavelength cones under scotopic conditions in the cyprinid fish Danio aequipinnatus. J. Comp. Physiol. A 181,493 -500.[CrossRef][Medline]
Roth, L. S. V. and Kelber, A. (2004). Nocturnal colour vision in geckos. Proc. R. Soc. Lond. B 6,S485 -S487.
Schwemer, J. and Paulsen, R. (1973). Three visual pigments in Deilephila elpenor (Lepidoptera, Sphingidae). J. Comp. Physiol. 86,215 -229.[CrossRef]
Somanathan, H. and Borges, R. M. (2001). Nocturnal pollination by the carpenter bee Xylocopa tenuiscapa (Apidae) and the effect of flora display on fruit set of Heterophragma quadriloculare (Bignoniaceae) in India. Biotropica 33,78 -89.
Stolz, U., Velez, S., Wood, K. V., Wood, M. and Feder, J. L.
(2003). Darwinian natural selection for orange bioluminescent
color in a Jamaican click beetle. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci.
USA 100,14955
-14959.
Strausfeld, N. J. and Lee, J. K. (1991). Neuronal basis for parallel visual processing in the fly. Vis. Neurosci. 7,13 -34.[Medline]
Underwood, G. (1970). The eye. In Biology of the Reptilia, vol. 2 (ed. C. Ganz and T. S. Parsons), pp. 7-97. New York: Academic Press.
Vorobyev, M. (1997). Costs and benefits of increasing the dimensionality of colour vision system. In Biophysics of Photoreception: Molecular and Phototransductive Events (ed. C. Tadei-Feretti), pp.280 -289. Singapore: World Scientific.
Walla, P, Barth, F. G. and Eguchi, E. (1996). Spectral sensitivity of single photoreceptors in the eyes of the Ctenid spider Cupiennius salei. Zool. Sci. 13,199 -202.
Warrant, E. J. (1999). Seeing better at night: life-style, eye design and the optimum strategy of spatial and temporal summation. Vision Res. 39,1611 -1630.[CrossRef][Medline]
Warrant, E. J. (2004). Vision in the dimmest habitats on earth. J. Comp. Physiol. A 190,765 -789.[Medline]
Warrant, E. J. and Nilsson, D.-E. (1998). Absorption of white light in photoreceptors. Vision Res. 38,195 -207.[CrossRef][Medline]
Warrant, E. J., Kelber, A., Gislen, A., Greiner, B., Ribi, W. and Wcislo, W. W. (2004). Nocturnal vision and landmark orientation in a tropical halictid bee. Curr. Biol. 14,1309 -1318.[CrossRef][Medline]
White, R. H., Xu, H., Münch, T. A., Bennett, R. R. and
Grable, E. A. (2003). The retina of Manduca sexta:
rhodopsin expression, the mosaic of green-, blue- and UV-sensitive
photoreceptors and regional specialization. J. Exp.
Biol. 206,3337
-3348.
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
C.-Y. Chuang, E.-C. Yang, and I-M. Tso Deceptive color signaling in the night: a nocturnal predator attracts prey with visual lures Behav. Ecol., March 1, 2008; 19(2): 237 - 244. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
C.-Y. Chuang, E.-C. Yang, and I-M. Tso Diurnal and nocturnal prey luring of a colorful predator J. Exp. Biol., November 1, 2007; 210(21): 3830 - 3837. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
G. H. Perry, R. D. Martin, and B. C. Verrelli Signatures of Functional Constraint at Aye-aye Opsin Genes: The Potential of Adaptive Color Vision in a Nocturnal Primate Mol. Biol. Evol., September 1, 2007; 24(9): 1963 - 1970. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||