Kelly Michael L, Peters Richard A, Tisdale Ryan K, Lesku John A
La Trobe University, School of Life Sciences, Melbourne, Australia.
Max Planck Institute for Ornithology, Avian Sleep Group, Seewiesen, Germany.
J Exp Biol. 2015 Oct;218(Pt 20):3175-8. doi: 10.1242/jeb.127605.
Reduced vigilance is the conspicuous cost of sleep in most animals. To mitigate against this cost, some birds and aquatic mammals have evolved the ability to sleep with one-half of their brain at a time, a phenomenon known as unihemispheric sleep. During unihemispheric sleep the eye neurologically connected to the 'awake' hemisphere remains open while the other eye is closed. Such unilateral eye closure (UEC) has been observed across avian and non-avian reptiles, but has received little attention in the latter. Here, we explored the use of UEC in juvenile saltwater crocodiles (1) under baseline conditions, and in the presence of (2) other young crocodiles and (3) a human. Crocodiles increased the amount of UEC in response to the human, and preferentially oriented their open eye towards both stimuli. These results are consistent with observations on unihemispherically sleeping cetaceans and birds, and could have implications for our understanding of the evolution of unihemispheric sleep.
在大多数动物中,警觉性降低是睡眠的显著代价。为了减轻这种代价,一些鸟类和水生哺乳动物进化出了一次只用大脑的一半睡眠的能力,这种现象被称为单侧脑睡眠。在单侧脑睡眠期间,与“清醒”半球神经相连的眼睛保持睁开,而另一只眼睛则闭合。这种单侧眼闭合(UEC)在鸟类和非鸟类爬行动物中都有观察到,但在后者中很少受到关注。在这里,我们探讨了幼年咸水鳄在(1)基线条件下,以及在(2)其他幼年鳄鱼和(3)人类存在的情况下对单侧眼闭合的使用情况。鳄鱼对人类的反应增加了单侧眼闭合的次数,并且优先将它们睁开的眼睛朝向两种刺激物。这些结果与对单侧脑睡眠的鲸类和鸟类的观察结果一致,可能对我们理解单侧脑睡眠的进化有启示意义。