Eyes, Vision, and Bioluminescence in Deep-Sea Brisingid Sea Stars

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Eyes, Vision, and Bioluminescence in Deep-Sea Brisingid Sea Stars. / Garm, Anders; Hamilton, Oliver; Glenner, Henrik; Irwin, Alison Ruth; Mah, Christopher.

In: Biological Bulletin, 2024.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Garm, A, Hamilton, O, Glenner, H, Irwin, AR & Mah, C 2024, 'Eyes, Vision, and Bioluminescence in Deep-Sea Brisingid Sea Stars', Biological Bulletin. https://doi.org/10.1086/729983

APA

Garm, A., Hamilton, O., Glenner, H., Irwin, A. R., & Mah, C. (2024). Eyes, Vision, and Bioluminescence in Deep-Sea Brisingid Sea Stars. Biological Bulletin. https://doi.org/10.1086/729983

Vancouver

Garm A, Hamilton O, Glenner H, Irwin AR, Mah C. Eyes, Vision, and Bioluminescence in Deep-Sea Brisingid Sea Stars. Biological Bulletin. 2024. https://doi.org/10.1086/729983

Author

Garm, Anders ; Hamilton, Oliver ; Glenner, Henrik ; Irwin, Alison Ruth ; Mah, Christopher. / Eyes, Vision, and Bioluminescence in Deep-Sea Brisingid Sea Stars. In: Biological Bulletin. 2024.

Bibtex

@article{dee28f7e9639412097556f63605a8331,
title = "Eyes, Vision, and Bioluminescence in Deep-Sea Brisingid Sea Stars",
abstract = "Sea stars are a major component of the megabenthos in most marine habitats, including those within the deep sea. Being radially symmetric, sea stars have sensory structures that are evenly distributed along the arms, with a compound eye located on each arm tip of most examined species. Surprisingly, eyes with a spatial resolution that rivals the highest acuity known among sea stars so far were recently found in Novodinia americana, a member of the deep-sea sea star order Brisingida. Here, we examined 21 species across 11 brisingid genera for the presence of eyes; where eyes were present, we used morphological characteristics to evaluate spatial resolution and sensitivity. This study found that eyes were present within 43% of the examined species. These brisingid eyes were relatively large compared to those of other deep-sea sea stars, with a high number of densely packed ommatidia. One of the examined species, Brisingaster robillardi, had more than 600 ommatidia per eye, which is the highest number of ommatidia found in any sea star eye so far. Combined, the results indicate that brisingid eyes are adapted for spatial resolution over sensitivity. Together with results showing that many brisingids are bioluminescent, this relatively high spatial resolution suggests that the group may use their eyes to support visually guided intraspecific communication based on bioluminescent signals. Phylogenetic analysis indicated that the common ancestor of brisingids had eyes (P = 0.72) and that eyes were lost once within the clade.",
author = "Anders Garm and Oliver Hamilton and Henrik Glenner and Irwin, {Alison Ruth} and Christopher Mah",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1086/729983",
language = "English",
journal = "Biological Bulletin",
issn = "0006-3185",
publisher = "Marine Biological Laboratory",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Eyes, Vision, and Bioluminescence in Deep-Sea Brisingid Sea Stars

AU - Garm, Anders

AU - Hamilton, Oliver

AU - Glenner, Henrik

AU - Irwin, Alison Ruth

AU - Mah, Christopher

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - Sea stars are a major component of the megabenthos in most marine habitats, including those within the deep sea. Being radially symmetric, sea stars have sensory structures that are evenly distributed along the arms, with a compound eye located on each arm tip of most examined species. Surprisingly, eyes with a spatial resolution that rivals the highest acuity known among sea stars so far were recently found in Novodinia americana, a member of the deep-sea sea star order Brisingida. Here, we examined 21 species across 11 brisingid genera for the presence of eyes; where eyes were present, we used morphological characteristics to evaluate spatial resolution and sensitivity. This study found that eyes were present within 43% of the examined species. These brisingid eyes were relatively large compared to those of other deep-sea sea stars, with a high number of densely packed ommatidia. One of the examined species, Brisingaster robillardi, had more than 600 ommatidia per eye, which is the highest number of ommatidia found in any sea star eye so far. Combined, the results indicate that brisingid eyes are adapted for spatial resolution over sensitivity. Together with results showing that many brisingids are bioluminescent, this relatively high spatial resolution suggests that the group may use their eyes to support visually guided intraspecific communication based on bioluminescent signals. Phylogenetic analysis indicated that the common ancestor of brisingids had eyes (P = 0.72) and that eyes were lost once within the clade.

AB - Sea stars are a major component of the megabenthos in most marine habitats, including those within the deep sea. Being radially symmetric, sea stars have sensory structures that are evenly distributed along the arms, with a compound eye located on each arm tip of most examined species. Surprisingly, eyes with a spatial resolution that rivals the highest acuity known among sea stars so far were recently found in Novodinia americana, a member of the deep-sea sea star order Brisingida. Here, we examined 21 species across 11 brisingid genera for the presence of eyes; where eyes were present, we used morphological characteristics to evaluate spatial resolution and sensitivity. This study found that eyes were present within 43% of the examined species. These brisingid eyes were relatively large compared to those of other deep-sea sea stars, with a high number of densely packed ommatidia. One of the examined species, Brisingaster robillardi, had more than 600 ommatidia per eye, which is the highest number of ommatidia found in any sea star eye so far. Combined, the results indicate that brisingid eyes are adapted for spatial resolution over sensitivity. Together with results showing that many brisingids are bioluminescent, this relatively high spatial resolution suggests that the group may use their eyes to support visually guided intraspecific communication based on bioluminescent signals. Phylogenetic analysis indicated that the common ancestor of brisingids had eyes (P = 0.72) and that eyes were lost once within the clade.

U2 - 10.1086/729983

DO - 10.1086/729983

M3 - Journal article

JO - Biological Bulletin

JF - Biological Bulletin

SN - 0006-3185

ER -

ID: 387429151