Relationship of dorsoventral eyeshine distributions to habitat depth and animal size in mesopelagic decapods
Relationship of dorsoventral eyeshine distributions to habitat depth and animal size in mesopelagic decapods
Eyeshine distribution patterns recorded from the eyes of 19 mesopelagic decapod species were examined and related to the depths at which the species are found. For most species examined, eyeshine was found to be brighter ventrally than dorsally. Deep-water decapod species that do not undergo diel vertical migrations had brighter dorsal eyeshine than migratory species. Eyeshine intensity increased with body size in five of the species examined and decreased in two. These changes in eyeshine intensity may be an adaptation to variations in depth distributions that occur with increasing body size. It is suggested that the depth and size-related changes reflect the importance of remaining camouflaged in the mesopelagic realm and are an example of ecologically functional development.
EYES, VISION, "DISCOVERY", CRUISE 204 1995
6-13
Johnson, M.L.
79803aa4-a520-4ee2-845f-a0090baf1c3f
Shelton, P.M.J.
c3ff4d3d-7d46-4959-a2b1-e4914690e664
Gaten, E.
0a6a1e2e-32aa-436f-91df-17bbbc4acb6c
Herring, P.J.
1721d764-adb4-41af-8e62-43a7e1b9c291
2000
Johnson, M.L.
79803aa4-a520-4ee2-845f-a0090baf1c3f
Shelton, P.M.J.
c3ff4d3d-7d46-4959-a2b1-e4914690e664
Gaten, E.
0a6a1e2e-32aa-436f-91df-17bbbc4acb6c
Herring, P.J.
1721d764-adb4-41af-8e62-43a7e1b9c291
Johnson, M.L., Shelton, P.M.J., Gaten, E. and Herring, P.J.
(2000)
Relationship of dorsoventral eyeshine distributions to habitat depth and animal size in mesopelagic decapods.
Biological Bulletin, 199 (1), .
Abstract
Eyeshine distribution patterns recorded from the eyes of 19 mesopelagic decapod species were examined and related to the depths at which the species are found. For most species examined, eyeshine was found to be brighter ventrally than dorsally. Deep-water decapod species that do not undergo diel vertical migrations had brighter dorsal eyeshine than migratory species. Eyeshine intensity increased with body size in five of the species examined and decreased in two. These changes in eyeshine intensity may be an adaptation to variations in depth distributions that occur with increasing body size. It is suggested that the depth and size-related changes reflect the importance of remaining camouflaged in the mesopelagic realm and are an example of ecologically functional development.
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Published date: 2000
Keywords:
EYES, VISION, "DISCOVERY", CRUISE 204 1995
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Local EPrints ID: 8911
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/8911
PURE UUID: 683d6bdd-a245-4026-a4cc-87e987da4f7c
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Date deposited: 10 Sep 2004
Last modified: 08 Jan 2022 00:56
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Author:
M.L. Johnson
Author:
P.M.J. Shelton
Author:
E. Gaten
Author:
P.J. Herring
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