Authors
Huabin Zhao, Stephen J Rossiter, Emma C Teeling, Chanjuan Li, James A Cotton, Shuyi Zhang
Publication date
2009/6/2
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
106
Issue
22
Pages
8980-8985
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Nonfunctional visual genes are usually associated with species that inhabit poor light environments (aquatic/subterranean/nocturnal), and these genes are believed to have lost function through relaxed selection acting on the visual system. Indeed, the visual system is so adaptive that the reconstruction of intact ancestral opsin genes has been used to reject nocturnality in ancestral primates. To test these assertions, we examined the functionality of the short and medium- to long-wavelength opsin genes in a group of mammals that are supremely adapted to a nocturnal niche: the bats. We sequenced the visual cone opsin genes in 33 species of bat with diverse sensory ecologies and reconstructed their evolutionary history spanning 65 million years. We found that, whereas the long-wave opsin gene was conserved in all species, the short-wave opsin gene has undergone dramatic divergence among lineages. The …
Total citations
2008200920102011201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202417139121716202219241710971210
Scholar articles
H Zhao, SJ Rossiter, EC Teeling, C Li, JA Cotton… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2009