Will I stay or will I go? Eye morphology predicts individual migratory propensity in a partial migrant

Kaj Hulthén*, Cornelia Martel, Dan-E. Nilsson, Christer Brönmark, P. Anders Nilsson, R. Brian Langerhans, Lars-Anders Hansson, Jakob Brodersen, Henrik Baktoft, Christian Skov

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Abstract

1. Billions of animals undertake migratory journeys every year, with powerful consequences for ecosystem dynamics. Key behaviours that enable successful migration are often guided by the visual system. The amount and quality of information that animals can extract from visual scenes are directly related to structural eye size-larger eyes can house larger pupils, enhancing light-gathering capacity and vision by improving visual acuity and contrast sensitivity.
2. Migration should exert strong demands on individual visual performance, for example via foraging, antipredator benefits or navigational requirements. Yet, it remains elusive whether variations in eye morphology and corresponding visual capabilities are associated with migratory propensity.
3. Here, we capitalize upon intra-population variation in migratory propensity (also known as partial migration) in roach, a common freshwater fish, to directly test for migration-associated variation in image-forming eyes within a species.
4. In a multi-year field study tracking the migration decisions of over 2000 individuals in two different lake systems, we found that relative pupil size was positively associated with individual migration propensity. Computational simulations of the visual ecology associated with the observed differences in pupil size show that migrants have an extended visual detection range and that the performance gain is most pronounced for viewing small targets (e.g. planktonic prey) under low-light conditions.
5. These results suggest that the larger pupils of migrants represent an adaptation for increased foraging efficiency to aid in the accumulation of critical pre-migratory energy reserves. Together, our anatomical and functional findings provide new perspectives on visual system design in relation to individual-level migratory decision-making.
Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Animal Ecology
Volume94
Issue number5
Pages (from-to)874-883
ISSN0021-8790
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2025

Keywords

  • Animal migration
  • Eye size
  • Partial migration
  • Pupil size
  • Vision
  • Visual ecology
  • Visual range
  • Visual system design

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