Many animals have eyes that are incredibly complex -- others manage
without. Researchers at the University of Gothenburg have shown that sea
urchins see with their entire body despite having no eyes at all. The study has
been published in the scientific journal Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).
Most animals react to light and have developed a very sophisticated way of seeing complex images so that they can function in their surroundings. Good examples include insects' compound eyes and the human eye. Charles Darwin and other evolutionary biologists were bewildered by the eye's complexity and wondered how this kind of structure could have evolved through natural selection.
Most animals react to light and have developed a very sophisticated way of seeing complex images so that they can function in their surroundings. Good examples include insects' compound eyes and the human eye. Charles Darwin and other evolutionary biologists were bewildered by the eye's complexity and wondered how this kind of structure could have evolved through natural selection.
But some creatures,
such as sea urchins, can react to light even though they do not have eyes.
Previous studies of sea urchins have shown that they have a large number of
genes linked to the development of the retina, which is the light-sensitive
tissue in the human eye. This means that sea urchins have several genes that
are coded for a widely occurring eye protein, opsin.
"It was this
discovery that underpinned our research," says Sam Dupont from the
University of Gothenburg's Department of Marine Ecology, one of the researchers
behind the study and co-authors of the article. "We wanted to see where
the opsin was located in sea urchins so that we could find the sensory light
structures, or photoreceptors. We quite simply wanted to know where the sea
urchin sees from."
The research group
behind the study showed that the photoreceptors seem to be located on the tip
and base of the tube feet that are found all over the sea urchin's body and are
used to move.
"We argue that
the entire adult sea urchin can act as a huge compound eye, and that the shadow
that is cast by the animal's opaque skeleton over the light-sensitive cells can
give it directional vision," says Dupont.
Story: University of
Gothenburg
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