Cave-dwelling Fish Fail to Keep Time
Eyeless Mexican tetra fish lose their circadian metabolic rhythms when they live in dark caves, but surface-dwelling varieties of the same species (Astyanax mexicanus), which retain the capacity for sight, continue to respond to light and dark cycles, according to research published yesterday (September 24) in PLOS ONE.The fish occur naturally in several forms adapted to living in caves; all are descendants of a surface-dwelling ancestor and vary from partially to completely blind. The cave-adapted fish also show a heightened reliance on taste and feel to find food or navigate and are better benthic foragers. The adaptations are important to survival: cave fish washed to the surface are more vulnerable to predators, while surface-dwellers swept underground by flooding rivers struggle to find food.Previous studies had reported significant differences in the metabolic rates of cave versus surface fish, which led Damian Moran of Lund University in Sweden and his colleagues to examine why. They found that in constant darkness, circadian rhythms in surface fish increased their metabolic rate and oxygen consumption during the “subjective daytime,” during which the animals used 38 percent more energy than blind cavefish. When in their natural day/light cycles, the lack of a circadian rhythm helped cave fish use 27 percent less energy than the surface fish that ramped up their metabolism in the light. The loss of daily metabolic rhythms may be an energy-efficient adaptation to life in the dark, the authors suggested.“Animals that live on the planet’s surface need autonomous circadian rhythms to tune their physiology to their daily activities,” Moran said in a press release. But species that live in perpetual darkness “can save energy by not ramping up their metabolism needlessly for a day that will never arrive.”
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