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First published online January 17, 2007
Journal of Experimental Biology 210, 447-453 (2007)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2007
doi: 10.1242/jeb.02658
Spectral sensitivity of four species of fiddler crabs (Uca pugnax, Uca pugilator, Uca vomeris and Uca tangeri) measured by in situ microspectrophotometry
1 Unidade de Investigação em Eco-Etologia, ISPA, Rua Jardim do
Tabaco, 34, 1149-041 Lisboa, Portugal
2 Department of Biological Sciences, University of Maryland Baltimore
County, 1000 Hilltop Circle, Baltimore, MD 21250 USA
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: jjordao{at}ispa.pt)
Accepted 21 November 2006
| Summary |
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Key words: fiddler crab, spectral sensitivity, microspectrophotometry
| Introduction |
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Given the relevance of vision in all of these activities, fiddler crabs'
eyes and their visual systems have long been the subject of research. The
major aspects of the eye's optics and the arrangement of ommatidia are common
among species throughout the genus Uca and are shared with several
other ocypodid crabs. To summarize briefly, fiddler crabs have apposition
compound eyes (Cronin, 1986
)
carried on long vertical stalks; they have a 360° panoramic visual field
(Land and Layne, 1995
), and
their eyes possess an equatorial visual streak, which they keep aligned with
the visual horizon by making compensatory movements
(Zeil et al., 1986
;
Layne et al., 1997
). The
equatorial zone is characterized by larger facet lenses and longer crystalline
cones and rhabdoms (Zeil and Al-Mutairi,
1996
), and the small inter-ommatidial angles in this region
(Zeil et al., 1986
;
Land and Layne, 1995
;
Zeil and Al-Mutairi, 1996
)
enhance vertical anatomical resolution. According to Layne et al.
(Layne et al., 1997
), this
anatomical feature divides the crabs' visual fields into two different zones,
allowing them to classify visual stimuli into `conspecifics' if the stimulus
falls below the horizon line or `predators' if the stimulus is perceived above
the horizon line.
Although the structural characteristics and ommatidial organization of the
eyes are fairly well understood, along with some of their functional
specializations (mainly regarding information on size and distance of visual
stimuli), there has been much debate about spectral sensitivity and the
capacity for colour discrimination in fiddler crabs. Some studies suggest that
fiddler crabs possess only one visual photoreceptor class. The
electroretinograms (ERG) on U. pugnax and U. pugilator
(Scott and Mote, 1974
), for
example, suggested the presence of only one receptor type with peak
sensitivity around 510 nm. Later, electrophysiological (ERG) and behavioural
evidence was presented for the existence of an additional short wavelength
receptor class in U. pugilator
(Hyatt, 1975
). Also, using the
ERG technique, evidence was found for a two-pigment visual system in the
fiddler crab U. thayeri: one pigment with peak absorption between 500
nm and 540 nm and another short wavelength pigment with an absorption maximum
near 430 nm (Horch et al.,
2002
). Besides Hyatt's original behavioural work indicating that
fiddler crabs could possess true colour vision
(Hyatt, 1975
), recent work
(Detto et al., 2006
) indicates
that fiddler crabs may use colour cues to recognize individual conspecifics.
Cronin and Forward attempted to characterize the visual pigments of U.
pugilator using microspectrophotometry on isolated rhabdoms
(Cronin and Forward, 1988
).
Unfortunately, this attempt was not successful owing to the presence of
photosensitive red screening pigment surrounding the photoreceptors, which
masked the changes in the actual visual pigments.
In this study we attempted to investigate the visual pigments of four
species of fiddler crabs, covering a wide phylogenetic scope
(Rosenberg, 2001
), using
microspectrophotometry on retinal slices. We examined two North-American
species, U. pugnax and U. pugilator, an Indo-West Pacific
species U. vomeris, and the only species found in the Eastern
Atlantic, U. tangeri. Our technique differs from that of Cronin and
Forward (Cronin and Forward,
1988
) in the experimental preparation of the rhabdoms, and our new
approach allows us to avoid many of the earlier problems caused by the
presence of the high concentrations of screening pigments immediately adjacent
to the rhabdoms. These pigments actually modify and tune spectral
sensitivities of fiddler crab photoreceptors, and we used our results to model
spectral sensitivities of the main photoreceptors in Uca.
| Materials and methods |
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Cryosectioning and experimental preparation
The animals used for analysis were dark-adapted at least for 2 days before
use. All subsequent procedures were carried out under dim red light [see
Cronin et al. (Cronin et al.,
1996
) for general procedures]. The eyes were removed from the live
animals, placed on cryosection stubs, fast-frozen with cryogenic spray and
sectioned at 14 µm on a cryostat at 25°C to 30°C. The
eye sections were collected on coverslips and mounted in marine crustacean
Ringer's solution, within a ring of silicone grease. After eye removal, the
animals were killed by immersing them in a container with ice.
Microspectrophotometry
Microspectrophotometry (MSP) was carried out using a computer-controlled
single-beam instrument [for a full description see Cronin
(Cronin, 1985
)]. The eye
section was inspected, and those rhabdoms that were cross-sectioned were
selected for measurement. Owing to the small diameter of the rhabdoms all
measurements were made with a very small beam (diameter of 1.5 µm), which
was also linearly polarized. Special care was taken to measure only within the
selected rhabdom and to avoid contamination from other sources. Scans were
made from 400 to 700 nm, with measurements taken every 1 nm. For each rhabdom,
a baseline scan was made in a clear area of the preparation first; then the
dark-adapted rhabdom was scanned twice to check for stability. If the scans
had identical shape, the second scan was used as the absorption spectrum for
the dark-adapted rhabdom. The rhabdom was then photobleached by exposing it to
white light for 2 min and one additional absorption spectrum was obtained. The
difference between the two absorption spectra was taken as the absorption
spectrum of the photobleachable visual pigment. Photostable material, such as
ommochrome-containing granules and screening pigment granules lining the
rhabdoms, was also measured. In this case, the absorption spectrum was
obtained directly, after confirming stability, with no need for the
photobleaching process.
Mathematical analysis
Once the spectral features of the photopigment in the rhabdom and the
screening/filtering pigment around the rhabdom were known, we used these to
model the spectral sensitivity functions of main rhabdoms of the four
Uca species, assuming that the red screening pigments act as lateral
filters. In carrying out this analysis, we used the theory of lateral
filtering originally developed by Snyder et al.
(Snyder et al., 1973
) to
account for the function of fused insect rhabdoms. That treatment showed that
the absorbance per unit length,
(
), of a composite rhabdom (or a
rhabdom plus the surrounding filter border) is simply the sum of the
contributions of the absorbing components, each multiplied by its respective
fraction of the total area of the structure. Thus:
![]() | (1) |
(
) is the absorbance coefficient at wavelength
,
C is the concentration, and A is area; the subscripts F and
R represent the rhodopsin and the lateral filter, respectively. The products
of absorbance coefficient and concentration can be replaced with the
absorbance per µm, measured using MSP. We used a rhodopsin absorbance of
0.006 µm1 at the peak (see
Cronin and Forward, 1988
![]() | (2) |
We computed sensitivity spectra, modelling curves based on the appropriate
rhodopsin for each species, using templates
(Stavenga et al., 1993
) and
the typical lateral filtering pigment found in each species. Because the
density of the filter per unit length of receptor is so much greater than the
density of the visual pigment, the calculation is very insensitive to values
of either
F or AF within realistic
ranges of values. As described earlier, we used 0.1 for the axial density of
lateral filter pigment (µm1), which was typical for
values we measured in all species, and assumed that the lateral filter pigment
occupied 20% (0.2) of the cross-sectional area of the photoreceptor's
absorption profile.
| Results |
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max)
is unlikely to be present in the main rhabdoms of these crustaceans. Average
results are described in Table
1 and plotted in Fig.
3, along with the best-fit template curves.
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Spectral sensitivity
Knowing the absorption spectra of the visual and screening pigments, it
becomes possible to model the spectral sensitivities of the four Uca
species, following the methods developed by Snyder et al.
(Snyder et al., 1973
) and
described above. The computed spectral sensitivities were normalized to their
maxima, and the resulting curves are plotted in
Fig. 5. The modelled functions
commonly have two peaks, one near the visual pigment
max
and another sharper, higher one, shifted to longer wavelengths in the
orange-red region of the visible spectrum.
|
| Discussion |
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Visual pigments
The MSP measurements only revealed the presence of a single spectral class
in main rhabdoms of all four species of Uca, with the maximum
absorption peak ranging from 508 nm to 530 nm, depending on the species
(Table 1 and
Fig. 3). This range of values
is in accordance with those of previous studies on the spectral sensitivity of
the genus Uca, independently of the technique used. As reviewed in
the Introduction, Scott and Mote (Scott
and Mote, 1974
) suggested the peak sensitivity of U.
pugnax and U. pugilator to be 510 nm, whereas Horch et al.
(Horch et al., 2002
) suggested
that one of the visual pigments in U. thayeri would have a peak
sensitivity between 500 nm and 540 nm. Hyatt
(Hyatt, 1975
) identified one
photoreceptor type maximally sensitive at longer wavelength, in the yellow
region of the spectrum, which is consistent with our results (after accounting
for the effects of screening pigments). Together, these findings (both across
studies and across species) support the idea that there is only one visual
pigment class in the main rhabdom (cells 17) of the genus Uca,
with slight differences in absorption maximum between species.
The debate still remains concerning whether there is an additional short
wavelength-sensitive pigment in the eyes of fiddler crabs. Short wavelength
sensitivity has been described for other brachyuran crabs such as Carcinus
maenas (Martin and Mote,
1982
), where it is associated with a second class of
photoreceptors in the very small eighth retinular cell (R8) of rhabdoms.
Although in situ MSP generally provides an accurate description of
the spectral absorption characteristics of photoreceptors, this technique is
difficult to apply to cells in the size range of the R8 cells in crabs.
Electrophysiological techniques such as the ERG have the advantage of
measuring the electrical response of the whole eye to specific wavelengths.
Although they are limited in their ability to identify the actual visual
pigments, they give us direct information on how the eye reacts to a
particular wavelength (that can either coincide with a visual pigment
absorption maximum or be modified by any optical filtering). Considering this
difference in techniques, along with good evidence that a two-visual-pigment
system is somewhat common in decapod crustaceans
(Johnson et al., 2002
), we
doubt that the Uca visual system contains only the single
photoreceptor type measured in this study. Other evidence for a
multiple-receptor system is provided by the selective chromatic adaptation
experiments done by both Hyatt (Hyatt,
1975
) and Horch et al. (Horch
et al., 2002
), both providing results consistent with the
existence of a putative short wavelength visual pigment. Additionally, Hyatt
(Hyatt, 1975
) also performed
behavioural experiments, presenting pairs of different wavelength lights at
intensities that were perceptually equal. U. pugilator clearly
discriminated between those choices. Also, recent work
(Detto et al., 2006
) suggests
that some fiddler crab species can discriminate among stimuli varying in
colour: U. mjoebergi individuals clearly discriminate between
unmanipulated males and males with the major claw painted over with yellow
pigment that looks very similar to the human visual system. The existence of
an additional short wavelength visual pigment, like that suggested by Horch et
al. (Horch et al., 2002
) for
U. thayeri, would enable this ability, and such a pigment probably
resides in the eighth retinular cells of rhabdoms, just as Horch et al.
(Horch et al., 2002
) suggested
for U. thayeri and perhaps other species of Uca.
Spectral sensitivity
Although the spectral absorption of the visual pigments that we found peaks
in the 508 nm to 530 nm range, the actual spectral sensitivity of fiddler
crabs' eyes is modified by the coloured screening pigment granules or vesicles
that line the photoreceptor cells (Snyder
et al., 1973
). The resulting spectral sensitivity in many species
within this genus is thus sharpened and shifted towards longer wavelengths,
producing a clear sensitivity peak in the orangered region of the
spectrum, together with a peak near the spectral maximum region of visual
pigment (Fig. 5). According to
Zeil and Hemmi, the colour of the screening pigment varies across the dorsal
and ventral parts of the eye, at least in U. vomeris
(Zeil and Hemmi, 2006
). This
way, spectral sensitivity may also vary across the visual field. However, in
the presence of such a gradient, colour vision cannot be achieved unless
ommatidia with different spectral sensitivity view the same object, or at
least have the same visual field, which seems unlikely given the ommatidial
arrangements of fiddler crab compound eyes.
Clearly, the screening pigments function to reduce the amount of light reaching the photoreceptors in species inhabiting bright light habitats. However, evolution has favoured pigments that also modify these crabs' spectral sensitivity, making the visual system in this genus relatively more sensitive to long wavelengths. One explanation of this finding relates to social signalling, which is typical of all species of fiddler crabs. Specifically, waving is one of the most important signals in the fiddler crabs' social system. Because of the flat topography of their mudflat habitat, during the waving movement, when the claw is completely extended, it is usually viewed against the sky. We suggest that a visual system maximally sensitive to long wavelengths enhances the contrast between the white coloration of the claw and the blue sky background. Even in the absence of colour vision, enhancing the achromatic contrast between the white or yellowish claw would make it stand out clearly against the blue sky (M. E. Cummings, J. M. Jordão, T. W. Cronin and R. F. Oliveira, manuscript submitted). Of course, there are species that inhabit salt marshes and mangroves containing a background of tall, and often dense, vegetation which, in these cases, would be the displaying background instead of the sky. Only a study including reflectance measurements of both the crabs and habitat would enable us to evaluate if a species spectral sensitivity has evolved to enhance the contrast between the claw and these alternative backgrounds. However, if we assume that a vegetation background will mainly be green, the sensitivity to long wavelengths that we have found in this study will also adequately heighten the contrast between the claw and the vegetation (M. E. Cummings, J. M. Jordão, T. W. Cronin and R. F. Oliveira, manuscript submitted). If it turns out that fiddler crabs are capable of recognizing colour, having a waving signal that is enhanced in visibility by a particular receptor class makes good evolutionary sense as well.
| Acknowledgments |
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