N. J. Marshall
University of Queensland
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Publication
Featured researches published by N. J. Marshall.
The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2003
Lydia M. Mäthger; Michael F. Land; Ulrike E. Siebeck; N. J. Marshall
SUMMARY The Paradise whiptail (Pentapodus paradiseus) has distinct reflective stripes on its head and body. The reflective stripes contain a dense layer of physiologically active iridophores, which act as multilayer reflectors. The wavelengths reflected by these stripes can change from blue to red in 0.25 s. Transmission electron microscopy revealed that the iridophore cells contain plates that are, on average, 51.4 nm thick. This thickness produces a stack, which acts as an ideal quarter-wavelength multilayer reflector (equal optical thickness of plates and spaces) in the blue, but not the red, region of the spectrum. When skin preparations were placed into hyposmotic physiological saline, the peak wavelength of the reflected light shifted towards the longer (red) end of the visible spectrum. Hyperosmotic saline reversed this effect and shifted the peak wavelength towards shorter (blue/UV) wavelengths. Norepinephrine (100 μmol l-1) shifted the peak wavelength towards the longer end of the spectrum, while adenosine (100μ mol l-1) reversed the effects of norepinephrine. The results from this study show that the wavelength changes are elicited by a change of∼ 70 nm in the distance between adjacent plates in the iridophore cells.
Vision Research | 2007
Ulrike E. Siebeck; N. J. Marshall
After hatching, larvae of coral reef fishes experience a pelagic phase during which they are diurnal planktivores. It has been suggested that ultraviolet (UV) vision is beneficial for the detection of planktonic prey. Aims were therefore to investigate whether ocular media of pre-settlement reef fish differ from those of respective adults, and whether larvae have UV-transparent ocular media required for UV vision. The ocular media of 84 pre-settlement and 98 adult species belonging to the same families were measured and compared. We suggest that adult lifestyle rather than planktivory in general shapes the ocular media properties of pre-settlement larvae.
Coral Reefs | 2006
Ulrike E. Siebeck; N. J. Marshall; A. Klüter; Ove Hoegh-Guldberg
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B | 2000
Ulrike E. Siebeck; N. J. Marshall
11ICRS: 11th International Coral Reef Symposium 2008 | 2008
Ulrike E. Siebeck; D. Logan; N. J. Marshall
23rd Annual Meeting of the Australian Neuroscience Society | 2003
Ulrike E. Siebeck; Shaun P. Collin; N. J. Marshall
Australian Neuroscience Society Meeting 24th Annual Meeting | 2004
N. J. Marshall; Shaun P. Collin; Nathan S. Hart; Misha Vorobyev; Helena J. Bailes
Australian Neuroscience Society Annual Conference 2005 | 2005
Ulrike E. Siebeck; N. J. Marshall
Seventh International Congress | 2004
N. J. Marshall; Ulrike E. Siebeck
24th Annual Meeting of the Australian Neuroscience Society | 2004
Helena J. Bailes; A. E. O. Trezise; N. J. Marshall; Shaun P. Collin