LOUVAIN, Belgium -- Some sharks deserve a blood
curdling reputation, but not the diminutive smalleye pygmy shark
(Squaliolus aliae). Reaching a maximum length of only 22cm, the tiny
animals are more likely to be on someone else's menu. Silhouetted
against weak light penetrating from the surface, the tiny sharks should
be most at risk from predators approaching from below. However, Julien
Claes from Université catholique de Louvain, Belgium, explains that the
minute sharks have evolved a handy trick. Their undersides are covered
in tiny light-emitting photophores that probably fill in their telltale
silhouettes. Adding that the distantly related velvet belly lantern
sharks have adopted this luminous tactic for camouflage and
communication, Claes and colleague Jérôme Mallefet were curious to
discover whether Pygmy sharks had acquired bioluminescence from the same
origin, or developed the ability independently. The duo publish their
discoveries that pigmy sharks glow for camouflage and that they probably
share an ancestor in common with lantern sharks because they use
similar mechanisms to regulate their glows in The Journal of
Experimental Biology at http://jeb.biologists.com.
Teaming up with Hsuan-Ching Ho from the National
Dong Hwa University, Taiwan, the scientists went trawling for smalleye
Pygmy sharks off the Taiwanese coast. Back in the lab, the team
collected samples of the fish's skin, injected substances – ranging from
neurotransmitters to hormones, which are known to regulate a wide range
of biological processes – and waited to see whether the skin began
glowing. Recording the time when the skin started producing light, and
the maximum intensity and duration of light production, the team
discovered that the hormone melatonin – which stimulates light
production in the lantern sharks – made the smalleye pygmy shark's skin
glow, while the neurotransmitters – which regulate light production in
deep-sea bony fish – had no effect at all.
However, when the team applied prolactin to the glowing skin,
they were in for a surprise: the glow faded. Instead of stimulating
30-min-long bursts of glowing light – as it does for lantern sharks –
prolactin dimmed the sharks' glow, which, according to Claes, is
intriguing from two perspectives.
He explains that in addition to using continual
bioluminescence for camouflage, lantern sharks communicate using bursts
of glowing of light from patches of skin on the pectoral and pelvic
fins. They regulate this specific form of bioluminescence with the
hormone prolactin. Having discovered that smalleye pigmy sharks use
prolactin to inhibit light emission and that the photophores were
restricted to the shark's lower surface, Claes and Mallefet concluded
that instead of using bioluminescence for communication, the smalleye
pigmy sharks use it purely for camouflage.
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