Printer Friendly
The Free Library
5,677,251 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Guys roll eyes: fish show some eyeball to their rivals.


Male fish in the Colorado River roll their eyes to flash a novel "Back off, punk" signal at other males, researchers say.

The razorback suckers' gesture--dipping the eyeball See eyeballs and eyeball driven.  to expose its upper third--ranks as the first documented eye roll among territorial signals, says vision specialist Inigo Novales Flamarique of Simon Fraser University Simon Fraser University, main campus at Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada; provincially supported; coeducational; chartered 1963, opened 1965. The Harbour Centre campus in downtown Vancouver opened in 1989.  in Burnaby, British Columbia “Burnaby” redirects here. For persons sharing this surname, see Burnaby (surname).
Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada, is the city immediately east of Vancouver.
. What makes the communication even more unusual, he says, is that it gets much of its punch from ultraviolet (UV) light.

People don't see UV wavelengths, but biologists have in recent years found that certain fish, birds, and other animals do.

Flamarique had puzzled over the UV vision in a razorback relative, a white sucker that spends most of its life in water too deep for the UV wavelengths of sunlight to reach. Then Flamarique got an e-mail from Gordon Mueller of the U.S. Geological Survey in Denver that described another deep-dwelling fish, the razorback sucker (Xyrauchen texanus), that swims to the shallows to breed. Mueller had noticed bright flashes from the eyes of males staking out breeding territories.

Flamarique says, "All of a sudden, I connected the dots" He hypothesized that those flashes included a UV signal that fish detected in shallow waters.

In lab tests, Flamarique and his colleagues confirmed that razorbacks have UV receptors. They're located where the retina receives light from below and would pick up a signal as one fish swam above another.

During razorback's breeding season, the researchers visited one of the few remaining populations in the Colorado River in Arizona. Flamarique and a colleague anesthetized a·nes·the·tize also a·naes·the·tize  
tr.v. a·nes·the·tized, a·nes·the·tiz·ing, a·nes·the·tiz·es
To induce anesthesia in.



a·nes
 seven razorbacks, moved their eyeballs to the rolled position, and dipped them in the Colorado River.

The rolled eyeballs reflect sunlight brilliantly, Flamarique reports. Compared with the rest of the reflection's spectrum, the UV part offers the strongest contrast to surrounding light and so would make a dramatic signal.

To see how fish react to glinting eyeballs, the researchers set a fake fish with LED eyes on each side of a big tank and loosed razorbacks in the middle. Male fish shied away from whichever model flashed its eyes.

Because female fish didn't noticeably react, eye flashes probably warn off intruding males, Flamarique, Mueller, and their colleagues say in an article now online for the Proceedings of the Royal Society Proceedings of the Royal Society is a scientific journal published by the Royal Society of London.

Today, the Royal Society publishes two proceeding series:
  • Series A, which publishes research related to mathematical, physical and engineering sciences
 B.

Yellow-bellied slider A block of material that holds the read/write head of a magnetic disk. See flying head.  turtles also roll their eyes, but as a different kind of communication, says Jeffrey E. Lovich of the U.S. Geological Survey in Flagstaff Flagstaff, city (1990 pop. 45,857), seat of Coconino co., N Ariz., near the San Francisco Peaks; inc. 1894. Lumbering, ranching, and a lively tourist trade thrive in the region, where many ruined pueblos, numerous state parks, several lakes, and large pine forests , Ariz. He's seen eye rolling eye rolling Neurology Rhythmic eye movements which accompany rotation of the head, seen in the Pelizaeus-Merzbacher form of leukodystrophy Vox populi Etc.  only in willing females being courted.

For creatures in water shallow enough for UV light to penetrate, those wavelengths seem useful as intimate signals, notes Molly Cummings of the University of Texas at Austin “University of Texas” redirects here. For other system schools, see University of Texas System.
The University of Texas at Austin (often referred to as The University of Texas, UT Austin, UT, or Texas
. She has documented UV-reflecting decorations that boost the sex appeal of fish. Because those decorations and the eyeball rolls aren't visible far away underwater, they can signal a nearby fish without alerting more-distant predators.
COPYRIGHT 2007 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:This Week
Author:Milius, S.
Publication:Science News
Date:Jan 6, 2007
Words:479
Previous Article:Message songs: wild gibbons warble with a simple syntax.(This Week)
Next Article:A new spin: X-rays shed light on black holes.



Related Articles
Fish-People With Attitude.(Brief Article)(Evaluation)
Second Skin (Segunda Piel). (Film review: thin skin).
REID TAKES PUNCH TO PROS : EX-OLYMPIAN TO START VS. RESPECTABLE OPPONENT.(SPORTS)
LITTLE CHARMER TODDLER HAS COME A LONG WAY.(News)
NATURAL RESOURCES GRAY MATTER - BOOK REVIEW.(Sports)(Review)
Vet caters to clientele hooked on pet fish.(Animals)
"Contemporary Erotic Drawing": Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum.
Pop-eyes.(physiology)
Mark a line.(IHMEE ...)
L.A. CONFIDENTIAL.(Sports)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles