Tu(co) Stressed?

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Let’s be honest: no one likes feeling stressed. We all know that stress can lead to the rapid ingestion of entire boxes of Oreos, unexpected emotional outbursts, and a handful of other negative consequences. But humans are not the only … Continue reading

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Do snakes have a better sense of direction than you?

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The ability to navigate our world is a skill that some people may take for granted. Imagine being abducted from your home, driven 15-20 miles away to a location you have never seen before, and being dumped on the side … Continue reading

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Examining chemical communication in harvesting ant traffic patterns during foraging

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Though they may be little, ants use a ton of cool different ways to effectively and efficiently gather food. Column foraging, the name of one of these strategies, is worth noting as one of the most impressive. According to an … Continue reading

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It’s getting hot in here: Male Alpine newts alter predator escape behaviors with changes in temperature

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The ability to effectively escape predators is an essential component of every organism’s behavioral repertoire. Responses to predator detection vary greatly between species, as well as within species, depending on various environmental factors. Recent research exploring these escape responses in … Continue reading

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Chicks use sensation of leg muscles to practice walking even before they hatch

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Chicks can do pretty amazing things. One of these things includes getting up and walking around within hours after hatching. How do they walk so well right after hatching? A new study in the Journal of Experimental Biology looked at … Continue reading

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There’s No Straight Path Home for a Pigeon in the City

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It is no secret that birds have impeccable navigational skills. Flight permits long distance-travel, and tools such as differentiating smells in the air and using an internal compass make a smooth journey to the destination. For pigeons, it turns out … Continue reading

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Stoeger Hears A Who: Estimating Age Ranges of Elephants from Acoustic Cues

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In Dr. Seuss’s book, Horton Hears A Who!, Horton finds a speck of dust containing a microscopic town called Whoville. While Horton is able to hear the townspeople, he is criticized by other animals for believing in something they cannot … Continue reading

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The Ripeness Hype: How Fruit Color Affects Foraging Behavior

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Communication, which can be loosely defined as a transfer of information, is vital to structuring the development and interactions between a signaler and perceiver. This transfer of information can be perceived as a one to one transfer of stimulus to … Continue reading

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The Sounds of Selection

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When it comes to cricket mating habits, what exactly are these insects looking for in a potential mate? What really makes a male stand out when competing for a female’s attention? Is it his strength, his intellect, his appearance or … Continue reading

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Ocean acidification leads to legally-blind fish

Estimated change in sea water pH caused by human-emitted CO2 between the 1700s and the 1990s (Global Ocean Data Analysis Project (GLODAP) & the World Ocean Atlas)

The widespread consequences of human activity are both remarkable and startling. Nearly 30 to 40% of human-emitted carbon dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere dissolves into our oceans, leading to a steady increase in ocean acidification that is projected to increase significantly into the future.

Yet ocean acidification, the process of decreasing pH and therefore increasing ocean acidity, is just one of the results of decades of substantial human-caused air pollution. In fact, the rising amount of CO2 in our atmosphere and oceans has a largely unknown consequence for marine life. A recent study suggests that increased CO2 may cause some fish to struggle with the sight of fast-moving elements in their environment. While previous research has illustrated that ocean acidification can negatively impact a fish’s smell and hearing senses, less is known about its impacts on fish sight.

The spiny damselfish, Acanthochromis polyacanthus

To investigate the effects of ocean acidification on fish vision, researchers turned to the spiny damselfish, Acanthochromis polyanthus, largely present in Australia’s Great Barrier Reef and easy to breed in a laboratory setting. The spiny damselfish uses its eyes to detect rapid flickering light, similar to the flickering humans can see on computer or television screens. Therefore, the quality of fish vision can be determined by how well fish interpret various speeds of flickering light.

Researchers exposed fish to different levels of CO2 and used electrodes to detect nerve activity within the eye. If the electrodes detect activity coincidentally with flashing light, it can be assumed that the fish recognize the flickers. However, each fish has a flicker threshold, where flickering light becomes too fast for the fish to process. When introduced to high levels of CO2, this threshold decreases and the fish are unable to recognize quick flickering light.

The results from this study reveal that damselfish exposed to high levels of CO2 have lower flicker thresholds than damselfish exposed to lower levels of CO2. This phenomenon is most likely caused by essential sight and behavior neuron proteins in the eye that are altered by increased CO2.

The low critical flicker fusion (CFF) threshold in high-CO2 treated fish is restored over 15 to 20 minutes after receptor blocker treatment.

The low critical flicker fusion (CFF) threshold in high-CO2 treated fish (squares) is restored over 15 to 20 minutes after receptor blocker treatment. Fish treated with low-CO2 (triangles) have consistently higher CFF thresholds.

However, all is not lost for the fish affected by high levels CO2 in this experiment; CO2-induced low flicker thresholds are reversible. Fish exposed to high levels of CO2 were treated with a GABA receptor blocker that restores normal neuronal activity and were able to regain their regular flicker threshold just fifteen minutes after being treated. But while the GABA receptor blocker injections may work to cure fish in a laboratory setting, it would be costly and impractical to treat fish in the wild.

Though the spiny damselfish is just one of thousands of fish species that use this particular family of nerve cell protein, many other fish species also rely on these proteins for normal eyesight and behavior. With the possibility of increased ocean acidification in the future, many fish may suffer similar eyesight deterioration.

Chung, W.S., Marshall N. S., Watson, S.A., Munday, P.L., Nilsson G.E. 2014 Ocean acidification slows retinal function in a damselfish through interference with GABAA receptor. J. Exp. Biol. 217: 311-312.

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