Published May 1, 2019 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data from: Zebrafish differentially process colour across visual space to match natural scenes

  • 1. University of Sussex
  • 2. Lund University
  • 3. University of Tübingen

Description

Animal eyes have evolved to process behaviorally important visual information, but how retinas deal with statistical asymmetries in visual space remains poorly understood. Using hyperspectral imaging in the field, in vivo 2-photon imaging of retinal neurons, and anatomy, here we show that larval zebrafish use a highly anisotropic retina to asymmetrically survey their natural visual world. First, different neurons dominate different parts of the eye and are linked to a systematic shift in inner retinal function: above the animal, there is little color in nature, and retinal circuits are largely achromatic. Conversely, the lower visual field and horizon are color rich and are predominately surveyed by chromatic and color-opponent circuits that are spectrally matched to the dominant chromatic axes in nature. Second, in the horizontal and lower visual field, bipolar cell terminals encoding achromatic and color-opponent visual features are systematically arranged into distinct layers of the inner retina. Third, above the frontal horizon, a high-gain UV system piggybacks onto retinal circuits, likely to support prey capture.

Notes

Files

Figure Arrangement.zip

Files (553.2 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:347d2591b6116cbff73d2f612d0b8d20
17.3 kB Download
md5:6dec2779158cce9cb126025ecc005cb7
155.2 kB Preview Download
md5:9e8b020656b43ca078bff12b95e2ccc0
390.4 MB Preview Download
md5:152157b59d4a34ca1314cf221d84201b
162.6 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Related works

Is cited by
10.1016/j.cub.2018.04.075 (DOI)