Nyholm and Mcfall-Ngai. Euprymna scolopes optical organ sampling microenvironment sampling bacterial Symbiosis Explanation of host cell population associated with Vibrio fisceri Biology Bull. 195: 89 - 97 collected the squid Euprimnna scolopes from the coast of Oahu, Hawaii, and revealed that the organs near its lower jaw are the host of the bioluminescent bacterium Vibrio fisceri. These photo organ krypto have lateral pores that release dense matrices of living host cells and dead host cells that often adhere to their surface in response to light exposure to their natural seawater habitat. DA
This soft seed is not bigger than a golf ball that allows a squid to satisfy the taste of any hungry hunter that can be eaten along the Hawaiian coastal water. In order to avoid becoming a snack, macaques have a strong alliance with shining bacteria called Vibrio fischeri. There is bacteria in the "light organs" under the squid, and at night, these small tenants will light up from the top according to the moon light pattern. This will cover the contours of the squid and help to make them invisible to the predator from below.
Squid has its own distress. As a night-time marine organism, this aquatic life is particularly vulnerable to mere predators of head-up and you can see the squid's silhouette shadowed under the moonlight backlight. But this little squid has a trick: an invisible cloak - an illusion of squid and bacteria collusion, not a dead Halloween. Each squid has a bright organism, including a bioluminescent bacterium called Vibrio fischeri, which produces a gloss under the moonlight, which helps the squid fit perfectly into its spotlight. The salmon uses their light to not become a midnight snack while microorganisms are eagerly living in salmon light organs
Optical organs are bilobal organs (Nyholm et al., 2000) with a pair of three holes in each leaf, allowing specific bacteria to invade the 6 internal deep crypts To generate light. Hatching underage carp, there is no bacteria in the new optical organ. Immediately after hatching, in the juvenile period, they got their symbiotic from seawater by the action of large ciliated appendix (Nyholm et al., 2000). Near the well, the host secretes mucus in response to the presence of bacterial peptidoglycan and accumulates various Gram negative bacterial species in the material (Nyholm et al, 2000). Through an unknown selection process, V. fiskela cells become a major group within the mucus and are selectively recruited to the pores. Once placed in the hole, V. Fischeri moves along the canal and approaches the basement