4.5 Article

Fiddler crab electroretinograms reveal vast circadian shifts in visual sensitivity and temporal summation in dim light

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 225, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.243693

Keywords

Gelasimus; ERG; Compound eyes; Light intensity; Dark adaptation

Categories

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [DP180100491, DP200102642]
  2. Royal Society [UF140558, RG150565]
  3. University of Exeter
  4. Australian Research Council [DP200102642] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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Many animals undergo optical changes to adjust visual sensitivity from day to night, controlled by a circadian clock. In fiddler crabs, the optical changes involve the increase of photopigment-packed rhabdoms and the widening of crystalline cone apertures. The study found that fiddler crabs have higher optical sensitivity at night, allowing them to discriminate small contrasts in dim light. They also use temporal summation to enhance visual sensitivity in both night and day. However, even brief, dim and intermittent light exposure disrupts the dark adaptation processes.
Many animals with compound eyes undergo major optical changes to adjust visual sensitivity from day to night, often under control of a circadian clock. In fiddler crabs, this presents most conspicuously in the huge volume increase of photopigment-packed rhabdoms and the widening of crystalline cone apertures at night. These changes are hypothesised to adjust the light flux to the photoreceptors and to alter optical sensitivity as the eye moves between light- and dark-adapted states. Here, we compared optical sensitivity in fiddler crab (Gelasimus dampieri) eyes during daytime and night via three electroretinogram (ERG) experiments performed on light- and dark-adapted crabs. (1) Light intensity required to elicit a threshold ERG response varied over six orders of magnitude, allowing more sensitive vision for discriminating small contrasts in dim light after dusk. During daytime, the eyes remained relatively insensitive, which would allow effective vision on bright mudflats, even after prolonged dark adaptation. (2) Flicker fusion frequency (FFF) experiments indicated that temporal summation is employed in dim light to increase light-gathering integration times and enhance visual sensitivity during both night and day. (3) ERG responses to flickering lights during 60 min of dark adaptation increased at a faster rate and to a greater extent after sunset compared with daytime. However, even brief, dim and intermittent light exposure strongly disrupted dark-adaptation processes. Together, these findings demonstrate effective light adaptation to optimise vision over the large range of light intensities that these animals experience.

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