Bioluminescence
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Bioluminescence is the production and emission of light by a living organism as the result of a chemical reaction during which chemical energy is converted to light energy. Its name is a hybrid word, originating from the Greek bios for "living" and the Latin lumen "light". Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) is involved in most instances. The chemical reaction can occur either inside or outside the cell. In bacteria, the expression of genes related to bioluminescence is controlled by an operon called the Lux operon. Bioluminescence has appeared independently several times (up to 30 or more) during evolution[1].
Bioluminescence occurs in marine vertebrates and invertebrates, as well as microorganisms and terrestrial animals. Symbiotic organisms carried within larger organisms are also known to bioluminesce.
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[edit] Characteristics
Bioluminescence is a form of luminescence, or "cold light" emission; less than 20% of the light generates thermal radiation. It should not be confused with fluorescence, phosphorescence or refraction of light.
Ninety percent of deep-sea marine life is estimated to produce bioluminescence in one form or another. Most marine light-emission belongs in the blue and green light spectrum, the wavelengths that can transmit through the seawater most easily. However, certain loose-jawed fish emit red and infrared light and the genus Tomopteris emits yellow bioluminescence.
Non-marine bioluminescence is less widely distributed, but a larger variety in colours is seen. The two best-known forms of land bioluminescence are fireflies and glow worms. Other insects, insect larvae, annelids, arachnids and even species of fungi have been noted to possess bioluminescent abilities.
Some forms of bioluminescence are brighter (or only exist) at night, following a circadian rhythm.
[edit] Adaptations for bioluminescence
There are five main accepted theories for the evolution of bioluminescent traits:
[edit] Camouflage
- For more details on this topic, see Camouflage.
[edit] Attraction
Bioluminescence is used as a lure to attract prey by several deep sea fish such as the anglerfish. A dangling appendage that extends from the head of the fish attracts small animals to within striking distance of the fish. Some fish, however, use a non-bioluminescent lure.
The cookiecutter shark uses bioluminescence for camouflage, but a small patch on its underbelly remains dark and appears as a small fish to large predatory fish like tuna and mackerel. When these fish try to consume the "small fish", they are eaten by the shark.
Dinoflagellates have an interesting twist on this mechanism. When a predator of plankton is sensed through motion in the water, the dinoflagellate luminesces. This in turn attracts even larger predators which will consume the would-be predator of the dinoflagellate.
The attraction of mates is another proposed mechanism of bioluminescent action. This is seen actively in fireflies, which use periodic flashing in their abdomens to attract mates in the mating season. In the marine environment this has only been well-documented in certain small crustaceans called ostracod. It has been suggested that pheromones may be used for long-distance communication, and bioluminescent used at close range to "home in" on the target.
[edit] Repulsion
Certain squid and small crustaceans use bioluminescent chemical mixtures or bioluminescent bacterial slurries in the same way as many squid use ink. A cloud of luminescence is expelled, confusing or repelling a potential predator while the squid or crustacean escapes to safety. Every species of firefly has larvae that glow to repel predators.
[edit] Communication
Bioluminescence is thought to play a direct role in communication between bacteria (see quorum sensing). It promotes the symbiotic induction of bacteria into host species, and may play a role in colony aggregation.
[edit] Illumination
While most marine bioluminescence is green to blue, the Black Dragonfish produces a red glow. This adaptation allows the fish to see red-pigmented prey, which are normally invisible in the deep ocean environment where red light has been filtered out by the water column [2].
[edit] Biotechnology
Bioluminescent organisms are a target for many areas of research. Luciferase systems are widely used in the field of genetic engineering as reporter genes. Luciferase systems have also been harnessed for biomedical research using bioluminescence imaging.
Vibrio symbiosis with numerous marine invertebrates and fish, namely the Hawaiian Bobtail Squid (Euprymna scolopes), are key experimental model for symbiosis, quorum sensing, and bioluminescence.
The structure of photophores, the light producing organs in bioluminescent organisms, are being investigated by industrial designers.
[edit] Proposed applications of engineered bioluminescence
Some proposed applications of engineered bioluminescence include [3][4]:
- Glowing trees to line highways to save government electricity bills
- Christmas trees that do not need lights, reducing danger from electrical fires
- Agricultural crops and domestic plants that luminesce when they need watering
- New methods for detecting bacterial contamination of meats and other foods
- Bio-identifiers for escaped convicts and mental patients
- Detecting bacterial species in suspicious corpses
- Novelty pets that bioluminesce (rabbits, mice, fish etc.)
[edit] Organisms that bioluminesce
All cells produce some form of bioluminescence within the electromagnetic spectrum, but most are neither visible nor noticeable to the naked eye. Every organism's bioluminescence is unique in wavelength, duration, timing and regularity of flashes. Below follows a list of organisms which have been observed to have visible bioluminescence.
[edit] Terrestrial organisms
- certain arthropods
- fireflies
- glow worms
- certain mycetophilid flies
- certain centipedes
- certain millipedes
- annelids
- Mushrooms (see Foxfire)
- Jack O'Lantern mushroom (Omphalotus olearius)
- ghost fungus (Omphalotus nidiformis)
- Honey mushroom
- Panellus stipticus
- several species of Mycena
- a terrestrial mollusc
- Dyakia striata
[edit] Fish
- Cookie-cutter shark
- Marine hatchetfish
- Anglerfish
- Flashlight fish
- Pineconefish
- Porichthys
- Gulper eel
- Many rattails
[edit] Marine invertebrates
- many cnidarians
- certain Ctenophores or "comb jellies"
- certain echinoderms (e.g Ophiurida)
- certain nudibranchs
- certain crustaceans
- certain molluscs
[edit] Microorganisms
[edit] See also
- Biophoton
- De Phenomenis in Orbe Lunae
- Foxfire
- Bioluminescence imaging
- List of light sources
- Milky seas effect
[edit] References
- ^ Hastings,J.W. Biological diversity, chemical mechanisms, and the evolutionary origins of bioluminescent systems. J. Mol. Evol. 19,309 (1983)
- ^ Long-wave sensitivity in deep-sea stomiid dragonfish with far-red bioluminescence: evidence for a dietary origin of the chlorophyll-derived retinal photosensitizer of Malacosteus niger. by R.H. Douglas, C.W. Mullineaux, and J.C. Partridge
- ^ Bioluminescent fireflies light way by Ron McAdow
- ^ Bioluminescence Questions and Answers
[edit] External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Bioluminescence |
- Bioluminescence web page
- Lights Alive! at San Diego Natural History Museum
- Bioluminescent fireflies light way
- Glow in the Dark Shark has Killer Smudge article describing cookie-cutter shark adaptation
- Glow with the Flow article from Scripps Institution of Oceanography
- Gonyaulax Bioluminescence at Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute
- glow-worms on the UF / IFAS Featured Creatures Web site