Published on 25 February 2010 |
Data from: Teasing apart the many effects of lighting environment on opsin expression and foraging preference in bluefin killifish
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Coloration and color vision covary with lighting in many taxa. Determining the mechanisms underlying these patterns is difficult because lighting environments can have multiple effects on signaling that occur at multiple time scales. Lighting environments can (1) immediately affect signal propagation and transmission which determine the radiance spectrum reaching the receiver, (2) induce variation in visual systems via developmental plasticity, and (3) lead to genetic differences in visual systems due to a history of selection in different habitats. We tease apart these effects on pecking preference and examine the relationship between pecking preference and opsin expression. Using killifish from two visually distinct populations (clear vs. tea-stained water), we performed crosses (genetics), raised animals under different lighting conditions (developmental plasticity), and assayed preference to peck at different colored dots under different lighting conditions (immediate effects). Pecks are interpreted as foraging preference. Developmental plasticity affected both pecking preference and opsin expression. Lighting environments also had immediate effects on pecking preference, but these depended on the lighting conditions animals experienced during development. Genetic effects were detected in opsin expression, but there were no corresponding effects on pecking preference. Overall, only 3.36% of the variation in pecking preference was accounted for by opsin expression.
Citations (1)
- https://doi.org/10.1086/652994DataCite MDC
Cited on 01 July 2010
Weight: 1.00
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Publication Details
Subfield
Cognitive Neuroscience
Field
Neuroscience
Domain
Life Sciences
Confidence Score
46%
Source
Scholar Data Model