Journal
ANATOMICAL RECORD PART A-DISCOVERIES IN MOLECULAR CELLULAR AND EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
Volume 277A, Issue 2, Pages 249-261Publisher
WILEY-LISS
DOI: 10.1002/ar.a.20005
Keywords
cardinal fish; eye dimension comparison; retina size; visual cells; ellipsoids and ellipsosomes; synapses
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Various parameters of the eye dimension and structure have been compared in 15 species of cardinal fish (Apogonidae), including both nocturnal and diurnal forms, mostly inhabiting rocky habitats in tropical and subtropical regions. In general, in the nocturnal forms the eye and retina are larger than in the diurnal fish of similar dimensions. In the nocturnal species, eye diameter to body length is ca. 12-13%, whereas in the diurnal species it is less than 10%. Retina size in adult fish of the various species varies from 20 mm(2) to 183 mm(2). Cytological examination of the studied retinas revealed that they are composes, additional to rods (20-40 mum), of both bulbous and slender double cones, as well as single cones. These cones form a mosaic comprising four double with one single in the center, a pattern that is less prominent at the periphery of the retina and more so in the fundus. The rod ellipsoids reveal normal mitochondria, whereas the cones bear ellipsoids featuring opaque and unusual, ellipsosomelike mitochondria. The number of rods in a retinas varies from 15 to 128 million, and the number of cones from 460,000 to 5,673,000. As revealed in cardinal fish of similar dimensions, the number of visual cells found in the retina is much higher in the nocturnal than in the diurnal species. The ecological and developmental aspects of the observed phenomena are discussed. (C) 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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