SUMMARYElasmobranch fishes utilise their vision as an important source of sensory information, and a range of visual adaptations have been shown to reflect the ecological diversity of this vertebrate group. This study investigates the hypotheses that visual optics can predict differences in habitat and behaviour and that visual optics change with ontogenetic growth of the eye to maintain optical performance. The study examines eye structure, pupillary movement, transmission properties of the ocular media, focal properties of the lens, tapetum structure and variations in optical performance with ontogenetic growth in two elasmobranch species: the carcharhinid sandbar shark, Carcharhinus plumbeus, inhabiting nearshore coastal waters, and the squalid shortspine spurdog, Squalus mitsukurii, inhabiting deeper waters of the continental shelf and slope. The optical properties appear to be well tuned for the visual needs of each species. Eyes continue to grow throughout life, resulting in an ontogenetic shift in the focal ratio of the eye. The eyes of C. plumbeus are optimised for vision under variable light conditions, which change during development as the animal probes new light environments in its search for food and mates. By contrast, the eyes of S. mitsukurii are specifically adapted to enhance retinal illumination within a dim light environment, and the detection of bioluminescent prey may be optimised with the use of lenticular short-wavelength-absorbing filters. Our findings suggest that the light environment strongly influences optical features in this class of vertebrates and that optical properties of the eye may be useful predictors of habitat and behaviour for lesser-known species of this vertebrate group.Key words: shark, eye growth, ocular media, focal ratio, tapetum, visual ecology.
THE JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
3584ocular parameters adapt to different light environments and influence the optical image reaching the retina. We reveal that the visual system of C. plumbeus has adapted to facilitate vision in the fluctuating light environment of coastal neritic waters, while S. mitsukurii has adapted to maximise light capture in the dim, semiextended light environment of the mesopelagic zone.
MATERIALS AND METHODS Source and maintenance of animalsA population of S. mitsukurii was sampled (N26) from the insular shelf of the Hawaiian Island chain in the Central Pacific. Three populations of C. plumbeus were sampled to represent the extremes in visual environment encountered by this species; a tropical population inhabiting the insular shelf of the Hawaiian Island chain (C. plumbeus H1 ; transparent oceanic waters, depth >70m, N88, , a temperate population inhabiting the continental shelf in the north-western Atlantic Ocean (C. plumbeus H2 ; turbid estuarine waters, depth <10m, N40, TL55-110cm) and a subtropical population inhabiting the continental shelf of eastern Australia in the Western Pacific (C. plumbeus H3 ; green coastal waters, depth >50m, N57, TL50-187cm) (Table1). Tissue samples ...