AI Article Synopsis

  • Deep-sea fishes face challenges in finding mates due to vast distances and darkness, leading to reliance on visual signaling, particularly with luminescent structures.
  • Observations of dragonfishes show that males have larger eyes, which may allow them to detect females from farther away despite females having larger luminescent features.
  • A study on the eye size of two dragonfish species confirms that females locate males before males can find females, suggesting that large male eyes evolved to improve mate detection efficiency.

Article Abstract

Deep-sea fishes must overcome extremely large nearest-neighbour distances and darkness to find mates. Sexual dimorphism in the size of luminescent structures in many deep-sea taxa, including dragonfishes (family Stomiidae), indicates reproductive behaviours may be mediated by visual signalling. This presents a paradox: if male photophores are larger, females may find males at shorter distances than males find females. Solutions to this gap may include females closing this gap or by males gathering more photons with a larger eye. We examine the eye size of two species of dragonfishes ( and ) for sexual dimorphism and employ a model of detection distance to evaluate the potential for such dimorphism to bridge the detection gap. This model incorporates the flux of sexually dimorphic postorbital photophores and eye lens size to predict detection distances. In both species, we found a significant visual detection gap in which females find males before males find females and that male lens size is larger, marking the second known case of size dimorphism in the actinopterygian visual system. Our results indicate the larger eye affords males a significant improvement in detection distance. We conclude that this dimorphic phenotype may have evolved to close the detection gap.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11268158PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2024.0165DOI Listing

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