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First published online October 5, 2007
Journal of Experimental Biology 210, 3616-3623 (2007)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2007
doi: 10.1242/jeb.004044
Visually guided obstacle avoidance in the box jellyfish Tripedalia cystophora and Chiropsella bronzie
Department of Cell and Organism Biology, Lund University, Helgonavägen 3, 22362 Lund, Sweden
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: anders.garm{at}cob.lu.se)
Accepted 30 July 2007
| Summary |
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Key words: Cnidaria, box jellyfish, eyes, behavior, obstacle avoidance
| Introduction |
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Several cnidarians have been shown to perform light controlled behaviors.
Some hydromedusae display what is known as a shadow response
(Yoshida and Ohtsu, 1973
;
Arkett and Spencer, 1986a
;
Arkett and Spencer, 1986b
),
which may be either a predator avoidance response or a consequence of their
diurnal migration (Anderson and Mackie,
1977
; Arkett and Spencer,
1986a
). Hydras have no eyes; however, some of their rhythmic
behaviors have also been shown to be regulated by light
(Taddei-Ferretti et al.,
2004
). This response is probably controlled by extraocellar
photoreceptors similar to those found in parts of the central nervous system
of the hydromedusae Polyorchis penicillatus
(Satterlie, 1985
). Examples of
horizontal migration guided by the solar position can be found in some
Scyphomedusae, e.g. Aurelia aurita and those belonging to the genus
Mastigias (Hamner and Hauri,
1981
; Hamner et al.,
1994
).
Cubomedusae have the most elaborate visual equipment of all cnidarians.
They have 24 eyes of four morphologically different types situated on sensory
structures called rhopalia (Claus,
1878
; Laska and Hündgen,
1982
). Eight of these 24 eyes are camera-type eyes with a
spherical fish-like lens containing a graded refractive index
(Nilsson et al., 2005
).
Cubomedusae also display a more elaborate behavioral repertoire than other
cnidarians and when observed in their natural habitat the behavioral
resemblance to fish is striking. They show strong directional swimming
combined with rapid turns (up to 180° in two bell contractions). There are
many accounts of cubomedusae displaying positive phototaxis in their natural
habitat (Yatsu, 1917
;
Uchida, 1928
;
Larson, 1976
;
Matsumoto, 1995
;
Lewis and Long, 2005
). In
tanks they have also been shown to be attracted to light objects and avoid
dark objects (Hartwick, 1991
;
Hamner et al., 1995
). In the
wild, the Caribbean species Tripedalia cystophora uses this positive
phototaxis to forage in light shafts between the mangrove roots
(Stewart, 1996
;
Buskey, 2003
).
In view of the advanced visual equipment of cubomedusae, more elaborate
visual behavior than merely positive phototaxis is to be expected. Here we
explore whether two species of cubomedusae, Tripedalia cystophora and
Chiropsella bronzie, display visually guided obstacle avoidance
behavior. We also test which of the four eye types might be involved in this
behavior and how obstacle size influences the behavior. Electrophysiological
recordings have shown that at least parts of the retina of the lens eyes are
color blind in the two examined species
(Coates et al., 2006
;
Garm et al., 2007
). Still,
using immunocytochemistry it has been suggested that several types of
photoreceptor are present in another species, Carybdea marsupialis
(Martin, 2004
). To further
investigate the possibility of color vision in cubomedusae, we performed the
behavioral experiments with differently colored obstacles.
| Materials and methods |
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Adult specimens of Chiropsella bronzie (Gershwin 2006) were either hand collected or caught in a dragnet at Four Mile Beach, Port Douglas, Queensland, Australia. They ranged between 3 and 5 cm in bell diameter. The animals were brought back alive to James Cook University in Cairns where they were kept in a round 500 l tank with circulating seawater at 28°C. They were fed dead Acetes shrimps several times a day.
Flow chamber
To maximize the number of encounters with the obstacles, the experiments
were performed in a flow chamber with semi-laminar flow at 1.0–1.5 cm
s–1. The flow chamber was 50 cm long and 10 cm wide and had a
water depth of 10 cm. The chamber had opaque white sides, and cylindrical
obstacles could be mounted in the bottom 35 cm downstream
(Fig. 1A,B). Plastic cylinders
10 cm high were used as obstacles and they were black, red, blue, green,
transparent, or transparent with a 5 cm black top above the water. All the
colored obstacles came in two widths, either 1 or 2 cm. The visual scene
behind the obstacles was the opaque walls of the flow chamber under the water
and above water it was white walls or the daylight lamp. In the case of T.
cystophora three obstacles were used at a time but with the larger C.
bronzie only two obstacles were used. Light was shone from above using a
500 W daylight lamp (MT400DL, Eyelighting International of North America Inc.,
Mentor, OH, USA). The spectral composition of the light reflected from the
colored obstacles was measured above water with a calibrated
photo-spectrometer (S2000, Ocean Optics, FL, USA) held at a right angle 1 cm
away. This was weighted by the spectral sensitivity of a 500 nm opsin
(Govadovskii et al., 2000
),
which has been shown to be present in the lens eyes
(Coates et al., 2006
;
Garm et al., 2007
), and their
relative contrast with the sides of the flow chamber was calculated
(Fig. 1C,D).
|
Experimental protocol
When running experiments with T. cystophora, each medusa was only
used once to ensure that they did not experience fatigue during the
experimental protocol. The ten different sets of obstacles were used in random
order and ten medusae were confronted with each set. In the beginning of each
experiment the animal was placed approximately 15 cm upstream of the obstacles
and after 30 s their behavior was video recorded for 3 min using a mini-DV
camcorder (only 1 min for the transparent obstacles). If a medusa passed the
obstacles it was immediately picked up and put back 10–20 cm upstream in
the chamber. Almost all passes included contact and were counted as such.
In the case of C. bronzie, each medusa was presented with the whole series of obstacles in random order. They are strong swimmers and showed no sign of fatigue throughout the approximately 40 min long protocol. The medusae were left in the flow chamber for 2 min to adjust to the experimental conditions, after which their behavior was video recorded and the obstacles were changed every 3 min. Six medusae of C. bronzie were tested with all ten different sets of obstacles and four were tested with the 2 cm wide obstacles only. Between each change of obstacles the medusae were given 30 s before their behavior was recorded.
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| Results |
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T. cystophora – wide obstacles
T. cystophora only performed an obstacle avoidance response in the
presence of the colored obstacles (2 cm in diameter;
Fig. 3). Avoidance responses to
the transparent obstacles were never seen
(Fig. 2C,
Fig. 3A,C), resulting in more
frequent contact with transparent obstacles than with any of the colored
obstacles (Fig. 3B,
single-factor ANOVA, F5,9=69.9, P<0.0001,
followed by Fisher's PLSD, P<0.0001). Also, the medusae had more
frequent contact with the transparent obstacles with a black top above the
water than with the all-transparent obstacles (single-factor ANOVA,
F5,9=69.9, P<0.0001, followed by Fisher's
PLSD, P=0.02).
|
0.0001). Other than this there were no significant
differences between the responses to the differently colored obstacles
(Fig. 3, single-factor ANOVA,
F5,9=77.9, P<0.0001, followed by Fisher's
PLSD, P>0.2).
|
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There was no significant difference between the responses to the differently colored obstacles. Still, the differently colored obstacles evoked avoidance responses with varying strength, which had a tendency to follow the intensity contrast weighted by the sensitivity of a 500 nm opsin (see Fig. 1D). The black high contrast obstacles (c=0.92) provoked the largest number of avoidances per minute (Fig. 5A) and the C. bronzie medusae spent the least time in contact with the black obstacles (Fig. 5B). The green obstacles with the lowest contrast (c=0.76) evoked the weakest response and the medusae avoided them the fewest times (Fig. 5A), spent more time in contact with them (Fig. 5B), and came closer before avoiding them (Fig. 5C).
C. bronzie – wide vs thin obstacles
The medusae of C. bronzie responded more strongly to the wide (2
cm) than to the thin (1 cm) obstacles and a total of only eight avoidances
were seen in response to the thin obstacles
(Fig. 6). In general they
avoided the wide obstacles more often and spent less time in contact with them
than with the thin obstacles even though this was only significant at the 0.10
level (one tailed t-test for uneven variance) in some cases
(Fig. 6A,B). In the case of the
black pair, the medusae also came closer to the thin obstacles before avoiding
them (Fig. 6C, P=0.02,
one tailed t-test for uneven variance). The low N values for
the thin obstacles should be noted for this parameter. When distance for
avoidance is converted into obstacle size in visual angles
(Fig. 6D) the results are not
as clear as for T. cystophora. The difference in response to the
differently sized obstacles decreases for the black and red pairs but for the
blue and green pairs it increases. None of the differences is significant at
the 0.10 level, though (Fig.
6D). There is no significant difference between the four
differently colored thin obstacles for any of the examined parameters.
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| Discussion |
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Visually guided obstacle avoidance
The visual system of cubomedusae comprising 24 eyes is intriguing and very
little data are available on its functional significance. Here we provide the
first experimental data documenting visually guided behavior in these
fascinating jellyfish. Theoretically the obstacles could also have been
detected by chemoreceptors, mechanoreceptors or electroreceptors.
Electroreceptors are not known from cnidarians but mechano- and chemoreceptors
are found scattered across the epithelium of many cnidarians including
cubozoans (Mariscal and Bigger,
1976
; Golz and Thurm,
1993
; Thurm et al.,
2004
; Watson and Mire,
2004
; Skogh et al.,
2006
). Still, all obstacles were made of the same material and had
the same shape and therefore none of these three sensory modalities would be
able to tell them apart. It must therefore be concluded that the obstacle
avoidance in the cubomedusae is visually guided. Mechanoreceptors may amplify
the response for T. cystophora, since direct contact with the colored
obstacles resulted in very strong escape responses.
Most moving animals are able to avoid the obstacles in their surroundings,
and in general fast moving animals use vision as the sensory base for this
behavior (Robertson and Johnson,
1993
; Errigo et al.,
2001
; Griffin,
2001
; Schindler et al.,
2004
). Slow moving animals often employ other senses such as touch
(Migita et al., 2005
). This
generalized picture fits well with the obstacle avoidance in cubomedusae being
visually guided, since these animals are agile swimmers
(Shorten et al., 2005
).
The results indicate that T. cystophora avoids obstacles more effectively than C. bronzie and this may follow differences in their habitats. T. cystophora lives between prop roots of which many are about 2 cm in diameter (A.G., personal observations) and it is therefore essential for this species to be able to respond efficiently to obstacles of this size. C. bronzie, on the other hand, lives off sandy beaches with fewer and in general large obstacles (large stones, branches and fallen trees; A.G., personal observations). This means that the obstacles can be detected further away, and a weaker obstacle avoidance response would be sufficient.
Which eyes mediate the response?
The 24 eyes of cubomedusae are of four morphologically different types [for
morphological description of the eye bearing rhopalia, see Nilsson et al.
(Nilsson et al., 2005
)]. This
suggests that the eyes are special-purpose eyes with a division of labor. When
trying to determine which eyes mediate the obstacle avoidance response the
orientation of the rhopalia needs to be taken into account. A crystal is found
in the distal part of each rhopalium and is often referred to as a statolith
(Claus, 1878
;
Pearse and Pearse, 1978
;
Laska and Hündgen, 1982
).
It is also a weight and since the rhopalium hangs by a flexible stalk the
crystal ensures that the rhopalium, and thereby the eyes, is always orientated
in the same way in relation to the field of gravity
(Berger, 1898
;
Coates, 2005
). As a result, two
of the eye types, the upper lens eye and the pit eyes, always look upwards
through Snell's window and into the terrestrial world. The two other types,
the lower lens eye and the slit eyes, look obliquely downwards and observe the
underwater world. In the natural habitat of T. cystophora the
obstacles (the prop roots) enter the water from above and could therefore be
detected both below water and above water through Snell's window. The
obstacles in our study with the black top above water (visible through Snell's
window) elicited no responses while the colored obstacles (only visible under
water) resulted in many avoidance responses. This shows that the obstacles
need to be seen under water to be avoided. As in their natural habitat, the
medusae swam at the very surface in the flow chamber, hence the colored
obstacles would not have entered the visual fields of the upper lens eye and
the pit eyes of T. cystophora before they were within 1–2 cm.
These eyes therefore cannot have triggered the majority of avoidances.
The ability to see the obstacles demands some degree of spatial resolution,
which is probably present in the lower lens eye of T. cystophora
(Nilsson et al., 2005
). The
minimum size of the obstacle in visual angles that provoked an avoidance
response was
12°, which fits nicely with the calculated half-widths
of the receptive fields in the lower lens eye of T. cystophora, which
are 10–20° (Nilsson et al.,
2005
). The slit eyes do not have image forming optics and their
spatial resolution must be very coarse. Taken together the data suggest that
the lower lens eye mediates the obstacle avoidance response. This hypothesis
will be tested by selective ablation experiments in the future.
Color vision or intensity contrast?
Our earlier results have shown that the lens eyes of both T.
cystophora and C. bronzie are probably color blind, having a
single receptor population containing a 500 nm opsin
(Coates et al., 2006
;
Garm et al., 2007
). Color
blindness is also suggested from the few other examined cnidarian eyes
(Weber, 1982a
;
Weber, 1982b
). When the
brilliance of the obstacles is weighted by the spectral sensitivity of the 500
nm opsin it is seen that the black obstacles have the highest contrast with
the wall of the flow chamber (c=0.92), slightly higher than the red
obstacles (c=0.88), followed by the blue (c=0.78) and the
green obstacles (c=0.77) (Fig.
1C,D). This contrast span is rather small, which may explain why
the response differences to the differently colored obstacles remained small
(see Results for the detailed statistics). Although not significant, the
results from C. bronzie suggest that the strength of the obstacle
avoidance response in this species is influenced by the intensity contrast
between the obstacle and the surroundings. They display the strongest response
to the black obstacles (Fig.
5): when confronted with the black obstacles the medusae had less
contact with them, they performed avoidances further away from them and also
displayed more avoidances. The low contrast green obstacles evoked the weakest
responses in C. bronzie: the medusae had the most contact with them,
and came closest to them before performing avoidance responses.
For T. cystophora there was very little difference in the response
to the differently colored obstacles but, interestingly, they performed
avoidances significantly further away from the red obstacles than from any of
the other obstacles. This suggests that T. cystophora respond most
strongly to objects with intermediate contrast. However, it could also imply
that obstacle avoidance behavior involves color vision, despite our
electrophysiological data to the contrary
(Coates et al., 2006
;
Garm et al., 2007
). Color
vision has been indicated in another cubozoan species, Carybdea
marsupialis (Martin,
2004
). More experiments using gray scale objects and colored
obstacles with a wider contrast span are needed to resolve which explanation
is the right one.
Response triggered by angular size of obstacles
An interesting question when analyzing the obstacle avoidance behavior is
what parameters are involved in triggering the response. This question may at
least in part be answered by comparing the response to obstacles of two
different sizes, 1 or 2 cm in diameter. In both species the medusae responded
much more strongly to the 2 cm wide obstacles. When the mean distances for
avoidances are transformed into obstacle size in visual angles it is seen that
across obstacle size this parameter is fairly constant, especially for T.
cystophora (Figs 4,
6). This suggests that at least
for T. cystophora the angular size of the obstacle on the retina
triggers the response. The mean visual angle that triggered a response
(30–45°) provides a measure of the minimum spatial resolution of the
visual system involved, but the actual resolution is probably higher. There is
a lag period between detection of the obstacle and turning, during which the
medusa comes closer to the obstacle. This is especially true for the slow
turning C. bronzie. The threshold size triggering the response could
of course also be larger than the minimum detection size. The minimum angular
size that triggered an avoidance, about 12°, is in good agreement with the
calculated half-widths of the receptive fields of the lower lens eye of T.
cystophora (Nilsson et al.,
2005
).
The 1 cm wide obstacles seem to be close to the minimum obstacle size that C. bronzie will respond to since they evoked very little response in this species. In total, only eight avoidances were seen. T. cystophora displayed the same rate of avoidances to the slim obstacles as to the wide ones and this species difference again follows the observation that the habitat of T. cystophora has the smallest obstacles.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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