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Visual adaptation of opsin genes to the aquatic environment in sea snakes.

Takashi SeikoTakushi KishidaMina ToyamaTakahiko HariyamaTakashi OkitsuAkimori WadaMamoru TodaYoko SattaYohey Terai
Published in: BMC evolutionary biology (2020)
Blue shifted LWS pigments may have adapted to deep water or open water environments dominated by blue light. The evolution of opsins differs between marine mammals (cetaceans and pinnipeds) and sea snakes in two fundamental ways: (1) pseudogenization of opsins in marine mammals; and (2) large blue shifts of LWS pigments in sea snakes. It may be possible to explain these two differences at the level of photoreceptor cell composition given that cone and rod cells both exist in mammals whereas only cone cells exist in fully-aquatic sea snakes. We hypothesize that the differences in photoreceptor cell compositions may have differentially affected the evolution of opsins in divergent amniote lineages.
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