Occlusable corneas in toadfishes: light transmission, movement and ultrastruture of pigment during light- and dark-adaptation
2003
SUMMARY The toadfishes Tetractenos hamiltoni and Torquigener
pleurogramma (Tetraodontidae) possess occlusable yellow corneas. We
examine the light transmission and location of the yellow/orange pigment
throughout the cornea, the temporal properties of pigment migration and the
ultrastructure of the pigmented processes during light- and dark-adaptation.
Each species was dark-adapted during the day and light-adapted during the
night and then exposed to either sun illumination or darkness for different
lengths of time (0–70 min). Movement of corneal pigment could be induced
in both species regardless of time of day or night. The pigment was able to
migrate in a dorsal or ventral direction and changed from minimal to maximal
pigmentation within 60 min. Three types of transmission curves were found with
varying degrees of transmission in the 400–500 nm waveband, indicating
that the pigment distribution is not uniform across the cornea; some areas of
the cornea transmit near UV light, while others absorb blue light. The gradual
change of the transmission characteristics in different areas of the cornea
indicates the presence of different concentrations of a single type of
pigment. Ultrastructural examination of the corneas showed that the layer
containing the pigment is situated within the scleral cornea either
surrounding ( T. pleurogramma ) or abutting ( T. hamiltoni ) an
iridescent layer. Long sheet-like processes or chromatophores extending
centrally from dorsal and ventral reservoirs are filled with pigment during
the light-adapted state but empty in the dark-adapted state.
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