“…Without a reference image of P. dolloi double cones from Pfeiffer (1968), this is difficult to confirm. Double cones are present in many teleost fishes (Stell and Hárosi, 1976;Collin, 1997;Collin and Shand, 2003;Pignatelli et al, 2010), and most terrestrial vertebrates such as birds (Hart, 2001), amphibians (Mariani, 1986), and diurnal reptiles (Detwiler and Laurens, 1920;Sillman et al, 1997), and some marsupials and monotremes (Young and Pettigrew, 1991;Ahnelt and Kolb, 2000;Ebrey and Koutalos, 2001). The function of double cones is still under consideration, but there is evidence that they aid in the detection of motion and discrimination in fine spatial detail rather than chromatic visual tasks in birds (for review see Hart and Hunt, 2007) but are involved in color discrimination in reef teleosts such as Rhinecanthus aculeatus (Pignatelli et al, 2010).…”