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Reindeers Change Their Eyes For Summer And Winter, Study Finds
National Geographic ^ | 3-13-2007 | James Owen

Posted on 03/13/2007 5:02:13 PM PDT by blam

Reindeer Change Their Eyes for Summer and Winter, Study Finds

James Owen
for National Geographic News

March 13, 2007

Reindeer have a different set of eyes for summer and winter, a new study suggests.

Scientists say the animals change their eye color and structure with the seasons in Arctic regions where permanent summer sunlight is replaced by 24-hour darkness in winter.

The visual alterations appear to be an adaptation to deal with polar light extremes, according to the researchers from Norway and the U.K., who add that the phenomenon has never before been recorded in mammals.

The researchers studied reindeer from the Lapland region of northern Scandinavia and found that eyes removed from animals culled in winter appeared deep blue when light was shined into them.

But the eyes of summer reindeer were yellow in color.

This difference suggests the reindeer alter their vision seasonally to match prevailing light conditions, said study leader Karl-Arne Stokkan, an Arctic biologist at Norway's University of Tromsø.

"It seems that the eye is reflecting what is the dominant light in the surroundings at the time, because in mid-winter the environment is predominantly blue," he said.

In summer, however, the reindeer's eyes reflect predominantly in the yellow part of the visible spectrum, Stokkan said. (Related story: "Fly Eyes Inspire Better Video Cameras, Motion Detection" [September 7, 2006].)

Eye Reflections

How mammals deal with the dramatic extremes in brightness at polar latitudes has been a long-standing puzzle.

The research team noted, for instance, that the eyes of test rats are "completely ruined" when exposed to conditions similar to the permanent brightness of an Artic summer.

Yet the eyes of reindeer, polar bears, and Arctic foxes are able to cope. For reindeer, the key may be changes in the reflective membrane behind the eye's retina called the tapetum lucidum ("bright carpet").

The tapetum boosts image information in dark conditions by collecting light and directing it back through the retina. The membrane is particularly well developed in animals with good night vision, such as dogs and cats.

Stokkan's team says evidence for seasonally altered reindeer vision was supported by structural changes in the tapetum.

The spacing of collagen fibers in the tapetum determines which part of the spectrum is being reflected.

These collagen fibers were found to be spaced further apart in winter than in summer, closely matching the shift in color reflections given by the reindeer eyes.

Similar shifts in tapetal reflection have previously been noted only in some marine animals, such as deep-diving sharks that adjust their vision to changing light levels, Stokkan said.

The researchers are still in the dark, however, as to exactly how this optical adaptation benefits reindeer.

"We have observed something which is absolutely real, but we have difficulties in explaining it," Stokkan said.

Light Sensitive

The leading theory to explain the adaptation, Stokkan said, is that in winter the animals increase the sensitivity of their vision at the expense of sharpness.

This is done by scattering the predominant blue light over receptors in the retina known as rods, which are responsible for night vision, instead of focusing light on cone cells that function better in bright conditions.

"The cones are responsible for high-resolution vision, but the rods are more light sensitive," Stokkan said.

"So the reindeer may improve their sensitivity to low-light conditions by sacrificing their cone vision in winter."

The blue of winter reindeer eyes "helps the retina make the best of its signals when the lights go down," added co-researcher Glen Jeffery of the Institute of Ophthalmology at University College London.

"The blue is favoring a dark environment," Jeffery said. "What you're seeing in the summer eye is the default state.

"It's just a bizarre adaptive mechanism—totally and utterly novel," he added.

The study team now hopes to replicate its findings in living reindeer, which has thus far eluded them.

The researchers also plan to study polar bear eyes collected from nuisance animals occasionally shot on the Arctic archipelago of Svalbard (see another Svalbard find: a dino-era sea monster).


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: eyes; reindeer; study; summerwinter
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1 posted on 03/13/2007 5:02:19 PM PDT by blam
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To: blam

2 posted on 03/13/2007 5:03:34 PM PDT by blam
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To: blam; leda

blue, green, pick one, pick a day. LOL.


3 posted on 03/13/2007 5:07:54 PM PDT by patton (In spit of it all...)
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To: blam

They adapt for all of those winter reindeer games.


4 posted on 03/13/2007 5:08:42 PM PDT by capydick (Better to Fight for Something Than to Live for Nothing)
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To: blam
Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

"The changing of the eyes is caused by global warming. Want to pull my finger for some reindeer offset credits?"

5 posted on 03/13/2007 5:09:35 PM PDT by teacherwoes (A fugitive from a Democrat Congress)
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To: blam

"We have observed something which is absolutely real, but we have difficulties in explaining it," Stokkan said.

Hmmmm....God is...er, I mean, evolution is sooooo impressive.


6 posted on 03/13/2007 5:11:14 PM PDT by vladimir998 (Ignorance of Scripture is ignorance of Christ. St. Jerome)
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To: blam

BTTT


7 posted on 03/13/2007 5:13:38 PM PDT by Fiddlstix (Warning! This Is A Subliminal Tagline! Read it at your own risk!(Presented by TagLines R US))
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To: muawiyah
You'd mentioned in a previous post that the Sa'ami may have unique eyes. Looks like their reindeer do.

Sami's

8 posted on 03/13/2007 5:13:53 PM PDT by blam
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To: patton

it depends on what color your shirt is ;)


9 posted on 03/13/2007 5:15:30 PM PDT by leda (The quiet girl on the stairs.)
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To: leda

Hey, I am faster than a flying reindeer...my eyes change color in a second, not over months.

Faster than a flying reindeer...um...

maybe that is not what I meant to say...


LOL.


10 posted on 03/13/2007 5:20:00 PM PDT by patton (In spit of it all...)
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To: blam
Are the stars out tonight? I don't care if it's cloudy not bright. Cuz I only have eyes of blue, deer.

11 posted on 03/13/2007 5:20:06 PM PDT by I see my hands (_8(|)
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To: patton

faster than a flying reindeer? lol!


12 posted on 03/13/2007 5:24:55 PM PDT by leda (The quiet girl on the stairs.)
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To: blam
"Reindeer have a different set of eyes for summer and winter, a new study suggests"

SOooooooo, If you accidentally blinded one in summer it would be seeing fine by winter? I wonder where they store the spare set?
13 posted on 03/13/2007 5:38:46 PM PDT by Beagle8U (FreeRepublic -- One stop shopping ....... Its the Conservative Super Walmart for news .)
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To: Marine Inspector

bttt


14 posted on 03/13/2007 5:57:50 PM PDT by Marine Inspector (Shhh, I’m hunting RINOs.)
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To: blam
Thanks. I'm still wondering about the blue-blindness, and it makes some sense if you don't have any blue cones and simply rely on your rods to supplement the signal for color purposes.

The chemistry to sense "blue" light is also different from that used to sense "red" and "green", and it responds slower. In the arctic day, the "blue" lagtime might well lead to early degradation of the retina ~ maybe in the form of a retinal neuropathy, or macular degeneration.

The extra complement of "red" receptors has an arctic night advantage.

15 posted on 03/13/2007 6:22:47 PM PDT by muawiyah
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To: WesternCulture; Charles Henrickson

This has probably been keeping you up at night.


16 posted on 03/13/2007 6:25:53 PM PDT by Pete from Shawnee Mission
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To: blam

Hey, if they can pull a sleigh to every house in the Christian world in one night, they can probably do anything!


17 posted on 03/13/2007 6:38:31 PM PDT by MarineBrat (My wife and I took an AIDS vaccination that the Church offers.)
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To: blam

Maybe this capability was in the original design!


18 posted on 03/13/2007 7:23:29 PM PDT by LiteKeeper (Beware the secularization of America; the Islamization of Eurabia)
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To: muawiyah
OK, Blam, here I am 10 full months from my last cataract surgery. Back in March when this thread was alive and in living color I was still wearing sunglasses at night. Little did I know that in just a couple of weeks my eyes would suddenly adapt and I could throw away the sunglasses.

Imagine my surprise when I discovered that my eyes had changed from GREEN with a black rim to BLUE, and not just blue, but a deep, penetrating hard blue ~

They've subsequently changed from that to a blue border around an orange center.

I suspect that as the days grow shorter and we head toward Christmas they'll go back to BLUE.

It seems logical that the human beings who successfully track/herd reindeer have to see at least as well as theiry quarry.

19 posted on 09/05/2007 6:32:29 PM PDT by muawiyah
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To: blam
...eyes removed from animals culled in winter appeared deep blue when light was shined into them.

They're dead, James.

20 posted on 09/05/2007 6:40:08 PM PDT by decimon
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