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Not Exactly Rocket Science
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Mantis shrimps have a unique way of seeing

Blogging on Peer-Reviewed ResearchEagles may be famous for their vision, but the most incredible eyes of any animal belong to the mantis shrimp. Neither mantises nor shrimps, these small, pugilistic invertebrates are already renowned for their amazingly complex vision. Now, a group of scientists have found that they use a visual system that’s never been seen before in another animal, and it allows them to exchange secret messages.

Odontodactylus_scyllarus1.jpgMantis shrimps are no stranger to world records. They are famous for their powerful forearms, which can throw the fastest punch on the planet. The arm can accelerate through water at up to 10,000 times the force of gravity, creating a pressure wave that boils the water in front of it, and eventually hits its prey with the force of a rifle bullet. Both crab shells and aquarium glass shatter easily.

Amazing eyes

As impressive as their arms are, the eyes of a mantis shrimp are even more incredible. They are mounted on mobile stalks and can move independently of each other. Mantis shrimps can see objects with three different parts of the same eye, giving them ‘trinocular vision’ so unlike humans who perceive depth best with two eyes, these animals can do it perfectly well with either one of theirs.

Mantis_shrimp_eye.jpgTheir colour vision far exceeds our too. The middle section of each eye, the midband, consists of six parallel strips. The first four are loaded with eight different types of light-sensitive cells (photoreceptors), containing pigments that respond to different wavelengths of light. With these, the mantis shrimp’s visible spectrum extends into the infrared and the ultraviolet. They can even use filters to tune each individual photoreceptor according to local light conditions.

The fifth and six rows of the midband contain photoreceptors that are specialised for detecting polarised light. Normally, light behaves like a wave that vibrates in every possible direction as it moves along. In comparison, polarised light vibrates in just one direction – think of attaching a piece of string to a wall and shaking it up and down. While we are normally oblivious to it, it’s present in the glare that reflects off water and glass and we use polarising filters in sunglasses and cameras to screen it out.

Light can also travel in a the shape of a helix, moving as a spiralling beam that spins either clockwise (right-handed) or anti-clockwise (left-handed). This phenomenon is called ‘circular polarisation’. Tsyr-Huei  Chiou from the University of Maryland found that the mantis shrimp’s eye contains the only known cells in the animal kingdom that can detect it. Our technology can do the same, but the mantis shrimps beat us to it by as much as 400 million years.

Eye for detail

Each of the mantis shrimp’s photoreceptors contains seven cells called rhabdoms arranged in a cylinder, and each of these contains thousands of tiny projections called microvilli. In receptors that are sensitive to polarised light, the microvilli are all arranged in one direction, creating a narrow gap that only light vibrating in a certain plane can pass through. Three of the seven rhabdoms are sensitive to one plane of polarised light and the other four are sensitive to a plane that’s perpendicular to it.  

Sitting atop these seven cells is an eighth rhabdom. In the fifth and sixth rows of the midband, the microvilli in this eighth cell are precisely aligned and everywhere else (and indeed in all other crustaceans), they are randomly arranged. It’s this key innovation that allows the mantis shrimp to see circular polarised light.

The eighth rhabdom creates a slit that’s angled at 45 degrees to those created by the seven cells underneath, precisely the precise angle that converts circularly polarised light into its linear version. The light is converted differently depending on whether it spins left or right, and this activates different groups of rhabdoms. When Chiou recorded the electrical activity of the seven underlying rhabdoms, he found that some were only sensitive to right-handed circularly polarised light, while others only responded to the left-handed variety. So in theory, mantis shrimps can not only detect circularly polarised light, they can also tell which direction it’s spinning in.

Benefits to behaviour

Chiou provided further evidence of this ability by training mantis shrimps to associate either left-handed or right-handed circularly polarised light with a food reward. After the lessons, he gave them a choice between two food containers that reflected circularly polarised light spinning in different directions. As expected, the animals were more likely to choose the container whose reflections matched those that they had been trained to prefer.

How does this unique visual system benefit a mantis shrimp? For a start, water is replete with circularly polarised reflections and being able to see these could help the animals to see their world in a higher contrast. But Chiou found that the parts of the shells of three species of mantis shrimps also reflect circularly polarised light. See, for example, how different the tail of a mantis shrimp looks under a right-handed circular polarising filter and a left-handed one.

CPL.jpg

Tellingly, males and females produce these reflections from different body parts that are commonly used for signalling during courtship. Chiou speculates that amorous mantis shrimps use circularly polarised light as a secret communication channel. Mantis shrimps use linearly polarised light for this purpose too and while many predators can’t see these codes, they are all too visible to cuttlefish, squid and octopus that prey on mantis shrimps. The animals avoid that risk by using a signalling method that their eyes and theirs alone can see.

Chiou also noted that some species, including the beautiful peacock mantis shrimp, are more sensitive to circularly polarised light than others. Their communications may be so secret that even other mantis shrimps can’t see them.

Reference: CHIOU, T., KLEINLOGEL, S., CRONIN, T., CALDWELL, R., LOEFFLER, B., SIDDIQI, A., GOLDIZEN, A., MARSHALL, J. (2008). Circular Polarization Vision in a Stomatopod Crustacean. Current Biology DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2008.02.066.


The amazing ways in which animals see the world

<p>In the animal kingdom, eyes have evolved dozens of times. We’re familiar with the camera-style eyes in our own heads, and the weird compound eyes of insects, but there are far weirder ones out there. Scientists are discovering new structures and adaptations all the time. There are eyes with mirrors, eyes with optical fibres, and eyes with bifocal lenses. There are eyes that see in the dark, move around heads, or go into sleep mode. <span> </span>There are even eyes made of rock. This slideshow will take you on a tour of some of these recent eye-opening discoveries.</p><p>Eyes don’t even have to be organic. While most animal lenses are made of proteins, the fuzzy chiton – an armoured relative of snails and other molluscs – has <a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2011/04/14/chitons-see-with-eyes-made-of-rock/">lenses made of rock</a>. The lenses are made of aragonite, a type of limestone and the same stuff that the chiton’s shell is made of. These rocky eyes give the chiton a view that’s a thousand times fuzzier than ours, but that’s still good enough to see passing predators. The eyes also erode as the chiton ages, which might explain why it has more than a hundred of them. <span> </span></p>
<p><strong>Read more: </strong><a title="Permanent Link: Chitons see with eyes made of rock" href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2011/04/14/chitons-see-with-eyes-made-of-rock/">Chitons see with eyes made of rock</a></p><p>Benjamin Franklin is credited with inventing bifocal glasses. These allow wearers to focus on both far and near objects by looking through different parts of the lens. But such lenses have been around for millions of years, on the <a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2010/08/29/the-beetle-with-bifocal-eyes/">nightmarish face of the sunburst diving beetle</a>. The beetle’s larva has six pairs of eyes, and the front set is unique in the animal kingdom. Each one has one lens and two retinas, one sitting behind and slightly below the other. The lens manages to focus sharp images onto both of them, so the beetle can see near and far objects at the same time, with equal sharpness. Its bifocal lens gives it two eyes for the price of one.</p>
<p><strong>Read more:</strong> <a title="Permanent Link: The beetle with bifocal eyes" href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2010/08/29/the-beetle-with-bifocal-eyes/">The beetle with bifocal eyes</a></p><p>In the deep ocean, the brownsnout spookfish can look up and down at the same time, with some of the animal kingdom’s strangest eyes. Each one is split into two connected parts, so it looks like the spookfish has four eyes. One half points up and the other points down, allowing the fish to look at both sky and abyss simultaneously. The downward eye is unique. Unlike the eyes of all other back-boned animals, which use a lens to focus light, <a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2008/12/30/spookfish-eye-uses-mirrors-instead-of-a-lens/">this one uses mirrors.</a> It uses hundreds of tiny crystals, arranged in a curved shape, to collect and focus light.</p>
<p>By reflecting light, rather than refracting it, these outer eyes could produce brighter images with higher contrasts that lens-carrying eyes normally would. That must give the fish a great advantage in the deep sea, where the ability to spot even the dimmest and briefest of lights can mean the difference between eating and being eaten.</p>
<p><strong>Read more: </strong><a title="Permanent Link: Spookfish eye uses mirrors instead of a lens" href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2008/12/30/spookfish-eye-uses-mirrors-instead-of-a-lens/">Spookfish eye uses mirrors instead of a lens</a></p><p>The box jellyfish isn’t just a simple blob of goo. It’s an active predator that hunts with 24 eyes. These are clustered into four groups of six. In each cluster, four eyes are simple pits or slits that sense the presence of light. The other two actually see images and they’re remarkably similar to our eyes. They have their own lenses, retinas and corneas, and they’re <a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2008/06/16/jellyfish-and-human-eyes-assembled-using-similar-genetic-building-blocks/">even made using very similar genes</a>. Even though we’re separated by millions of years of evolution, box jellyfish and back-boned animals have evolved eyes by independently recruiting the same building blocks.</p>
<p>The eye clusters are weighed down by heavy crystals so they're always upright, even if the jellyfish is swimming upside-down. This gives the animal <a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2011/04/28/why-box-jellyfish-always-have-four-eyes-on-the-sky/">a perpetual view of the sky</a>, which allows it to stay close to the mangrove forests where its prey lives.</p>
<p>(<em>Photos by Anders Garm</em>)</p>
<p><strong>Read more: </strong><a title="Permanent Link: Jellyfish and human eyes assembled using similar genetic building blocks" href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2008/06/16/jellyfish-and-human-eyes-assembled-using-similar-genetic-building-blocks/">Jellyfish and human eyes assembled using similar genetic building blocks</a></p><p>Mantis shrimps have the arguably the most incredible eyes of any animal. Each eye has three areas that can independently focus on objects, which means that a single mantis shrimp eye has “trinocular vision”. Our eyes have receptors that are tuned to three colours; those of mantis shrimps are tuned to at least twelve. And they can tune individual light-sensitive cells to local light levels.</p>
<p>Mantis shrimps can even see a special type of light – ‘circularly polarised light’ – <a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2008/03/21/mantis-shrimps-have-a-unique-way-of-seeing" target="_blank">that no other animal can</a>. This ability allows them to send secret messages, produced by circularly polarised light reflecting off different parts of their shell. The ability hinges on a structure in their eyes that’s <a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2009/10/25/mantis-shrimp-eyes-outclass-dvd-players-inspire-new-technology/">similar to technology found in our CD and DVD players</a>. The mantis shrimp’s biological engineering completely outclasses our man-made efforts; if we could duplicate it, we could have the basis of tomorrow’s multimedia players and hard drives.</p>
<p><strong>Read more: </strong><a title="Permanent Link: Mantis shrimps have a unique way of seeing" href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2008/03/21/mantis-shrimps-have-a-unique-way-of-seeing/">Mantis shrimps have a unique way of seeing</a>; <a title="Permanent Link: Mantis shrimp eyes outclass DVD players, inspire new technology" href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2009/10/25/mantis-shrimp-eyes-outclass-dvd-players-inspire-new-technology/">Mantis shrimp eyes outclass DVD players, inspire new technology</a></p><p>When we go to sleep at night, we close our eyes to stop any errant light from disturbing our slumber. But the larvae of zebrafish go one further. They <a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2010/03/09/pocket-science-chameleons-hunt-with-cold-proof-tongues-and-zebrafish-babies-go-blind-at-night/">shut down their eyes entirely at night</a>, becoming temporarily blind. Their vision only returns when daylight does. Energy is precious to the baby fish and eyes are gas-guzzling appliances, even when they’re set to standby. It makes sense to just shut them off instead.</p>
<p><strong>Read more: </strong><a title="Permanent Link: Pocket Science – chameleons hunt with cold-proof tongues and zebrafish babies go blind at night" href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2010/03/09/pocket-science-chameleons-hunt-with-cold-proof-tongues-and-zebrafish-babies-go-blind-at-night/">Pocket Science –zebrafish babies go blind at night</a></p><p>Even our own familiar eyes have hidden surprises. In 2009, scientists found that we’re all <a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2009/02/08/living-optic-fibres-bypass-the-retinas-incompetent-design/">carrying living optic fibres called Muller cells</a>. These cells help to get round a structural problem in our eyes, where the light-sensing cells of the retina lie behind a tangled mass of nerves and blood vessels. It’s a bit like designing a camera, and sticking the wiring in front of the lens. Light gets through the mess inside the long, cylindrical Muller cells. It reflects down the cell, much like in an optic fibre, to hit the light-sensing cells on the other side. (<em>Image by <a href="http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Human_left_eye-8.jpg">Elyzhium</a></em>)</p>
<p><strong>Read more: </strong><a title="Permanent Link: Living optic fibres bypass the retina’s incompetent design" href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2009/02/08/living-optic-fibres-bypass-the-retinas-incompetent-design/">Living optic fibres bypass the retina’s incompetent design</a></p><p>Many mammals have evolved eyes that can see in the dark. That involves more than just becoming bigger. Their eyes have more light-sensitive rod cells, and these cells have changed at a microscopic level. They have converted the nucleus at the middle of each cell <a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2009/04/21/nocturnal-mammals-see-in-dark-by-turning-displaced-dna-into-lenses/">into a light-collecting lens</a>.</p>
<p>In almost all complex cells, DNA is tightly packed around the edge of the nucleus but lightly packed towards its middle. But in the rod cells of nocturnal mammals, it’s the other way round. This inverted arrangement collects light that hits the rod cells and funnels it through to the retina underneath. By moving its DNA around, each cell has become a little optic fibre.</p>
<p><strong>Read more: </strong><a title="Permanent Link: Nocturnal mammals see in dark by turning displaced DNA into lenses" href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2009/04/21/nocturnal-mammals-see-in-dark-by-turning-displaced-dna-into-lenses/">Nocturnal mammals see in dark by turning displaced DNA into lenses</a></p><p>Like many species that live in perpetual darkness, the <a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2010/10/05/cross-breeding-restores-sight-to-blind-cavefish/">blind cavefish has lost its eyes</a>. These fish have evolved from sighted ancestors <a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2011/04/07/sleepless-in-mexico-%E2%80%93-three-cavefish-groups-independently-evolved-to-lose-sleep/">on several occasions in</a> different Mexican caves. Their eyes have degenerated over a million years of darkness, but their blindness can be easily reversed by a spot of clever breeding. Many genes govern the development of eyes, and different populations of cavefish have lost their vision by disrupting different eye genes. By breeding individuals from different caves, working genes from one parent can compensate for broken ones from another. The result: babies that can see. (<em>Photo by <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/skippy/75380086/sizes/z/in/photostream/">skpy</a></em>)</p>
<p><strong>Read more: </strong><a title="Permanent Link: Cross-breeding restores sight to blind cavefish" href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2010/10/05/cross-breeding-restores-sight-to-blind-cavefish/">Cross-breeding restores sight to blind cavefish</a></p><p>As babies, flatfishes like plaice and flounders look like every other fish. But as they grow up, one of their eyes moves to the other side of their heads. This allows the adults to lie flat on their sides without getting an eyeful of sand. The evolution of these grotesque fish is <a href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2008/07/09/early-flatfish-has-eye-thats-moved-halfway-across-its-head/">beautifully captured by a fossil called Heteronectes</a>. It’s a half-committed flatfish. One of its eyes has begun migrating to the other side of its head but hasn’t made it all the way – it stops at the midline. We couldn’t have wished for a better intermediate form – it’s half-way between the standard fish body plan and the distorted visages of flounders and soles.</p>
<p><strong>Read more: </strong><a title="Permanent Link: Early flatfish has eye that’s moved halfway across its head" href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2008/07/09/early-flatfish-has-eye-thats-moved-halfway-across-its-head/">Early flatfish has eye that’s moved halfway across its head</a></p><p>The Hawaiian bobtail squid creates its own light, using special organs filled with glowing bacteria. But these organs don’t just produce light – <a title="Permanent Link: Glowing squid use bacterial flashlights that double as an extra pair of “eyes”" href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2009/06/02/glowing-squid-use-bacterial-flashlights-that-double-as-an-extra-pair-of-eyes/">they sense it too</a>. They are loaded with proteins that can detect light, and they produce nervous signals in bright conditions. They can expand and contract like an iris to control how much light gets through. They’re covered with a thick, transparent tissue that acts like a “lens”. The light organs are effectively an extra set of primitive eyes. They are living, ‘seeing’ flashlights. (<strong><em><span style="font-family: &quot;Calibri&quot;,&quot;sans-serif&quot;; font-weight: normal;">Image by </span></em></strong><em>William Ormerod</em>)</p>
<p><strong>Read more: </strong><a title="Permanent Link: Glowing squid use bacterial flashlights that double as an extra pair of “eyes”" href="http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2009/06/02/glowing-squid-use-bacterial-flashlights-that-double-as-an-extra-pair-of-eyes/">Glowing squid use bacterial flashlights that double as an extra pair of “eyes”</a></p>
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March 21st, 2008 Tags: arthropods, circular polarised light, mantis shrimps, photoreceptors, polarised light, rhabdomeres, stomatopods, vision, visual system
by Ed Yong in Animal behaviour, Animal communication, Animals, Crustaceans, Eye evolution, Invertebrates | 13 comments | RSS feed | Trackback >

13 Responses to “Mantis shrimps have a unique way of seeing”

  1. 1.   Brian Says:
    March 21st, 2008 at 1:21 pm

    I agree. I want one.

  2. 2.   Twitch Says:
    March 21st, 2008 at 3:10 pm

    I want to BE one!

  3. 3.   Ed Yong Says:
    March 21st, 2008 at 7:15 pm

    This is a shout-out to Peter, a commenter over at Deep Sea News, who came up with the best description of a mantis shrimp I’ve read yet:
    “They break things with a cavitation hammer. Kind of like Thor.”
    Heh.

  4. 4.   Joseph O'Sullivan Says:
    March 24th, 2008 at 5:08 pm

    Mantis shrimp are very cool. I wasn’t sure if they were the coolest until I watched the video and saw the German name for mantis shrimp “fangschreckenkrebse” which loosely translates to “scary-claw crab”. With a name like that, they have to be the coolest marine invert.

  5. 5.   Ed Yong Says:
    March 24th, 2008 at 5:37 pm

    Well-spotted – the awesomeness continues! Surely the battle is now over? On a related note, one of my friends refers to mantis shrimps as “explodo-prawns”.

  6. 6.   che Says:
    March 27th, 2008 at 6:58 am

    “The arm can accelerate through water at up to 10,000 times the force of gravity, creating a pressure wave that boils the water in front of it, and eventually hits its prey with the force of a rifle bullet”
    Does the acceleration or even striking objects with this kind of force not eventually damage the shrimp’s arms?

  7. 7.   Ed Yong Says:
    March 27th, 2008 at 7:10 am

    Yes – the boiling water in particular heavily pits the surface of the club, but mantis shrimps cope with that by moulting the outer layer of their arms every couple of arms. They have a continuously regenerating smashing surface.

  8. 8.   Holly Irick Says:
    April 5th, 2009 at 5:30 pm

    These guys could be the greatest artists in the world, and we wouldn’t be able to see why.

  9. 9.   Lawrence Says:
    August 1st, 2009 at 6:09 am

    Very interesting article. I read that the mantis shrimp’s claw is protected with hard minerals. Were do they get these from?

  10. 10.   Ken Kryszak Says:
    August 2nd, 2009 at 3:29 pm

    Mantis Shrimp are known to fishermen as “Thumbsplitter”.
    Reef aquariats sometimes get Mantis Shrimp as hitchhikers on reef rocks. They typically have to be trapped out due to their predatory and destructive nature. My fascination for them is now such that I’d like to keep some on purpose, with suitably thick glass of course.

  11. 11.   mantismaniac Says:
    August 31st, 2009 at 7:07 am

    If the smashers only eat hard shelled animals…. do you think it will eat a sea cucumber if i put one in my tank?

  12. 12.   Jérôme ^ Says:
    September 4th, 2009 at 8:54 am

    One more point for the mantis shrimp: it is one of the very few animals that evolved rolling. Well, it kind of rolls, by performing several successive somersaults (according to Wikipedia). Which is even cooler.
    Eat that, sea cucumber!

  13. 13.   MintySinty Says:
    December 11th, 2009 at 3:28 am

    These little guys are just the coolest thing. I’m planning on getting a tank set up once I move to another house, anyone know of a good place to order one online if I find the local aquarist store doesn’t carry smashers? They had a list of incoming shipments, and mantis shrimp was listed, but it didn’t say what kind.

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