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Fish eye sheds light on colour vision

Published: 23 Dec 2014 - 11:19 pm | Last Updated: 18 Jan 2022 - 03:38 pm

PARIS: A fish eye from a primitive time when Earth was but one single continent, has yielded evidence of colour vision dating back at least 300 million years, researchers said yesterday.
Analysing the fossilised remains of a fish from the “spiny shark” family that lived long before the dinosaurs, scientists discovered light-sensing “rod” and “cone” eye cells — the oldest ever found.
“This is the first discovery of vertebrate retinal fossils,” said Gengo Tanaka from Japan’s Kumamoto University, who co-authored the study. It is rare for palaeontologists to find eye remains, as the soft tissue generally decays within 64 days, the authors of the study said.
However, the Hamilton Quarry in Kansas is a treasure trove of well-preserved fossils — an entire ecosystem having been rapidly buried under sediment. They included the extinct fish Acanthodes bridgei — among the oldest known vertebrates with jaws.
An A. bridgei specimen found at the quarry retained elements of the original eye colour and shape, and a light-absorbing pigment in the retina. The remains had been preserved under a thin coating of phosphate, Tanaka said.
Analysis of the tissue “provides the first record of mineralised rods and cones in a fossil,” said the study. These, combined with light-absorbing melanin pigments, suggested the fish was “probably” able to see in low light using highly-sensitive rod cells, and by day using cone cells.
In modern animals, cone cells respond individually to light at specific wavelengths, thus allowing observation of different colours.  Vision is thought to have existed for at least 520 million years, but this is the first direct evidence of colour-sensitive receptors.
AFP