COLOUR CHANGE IN XENOPUS TADPOLES
Rapid colour changes in animals, for camouflage or courtship, involve cells in the skin called chromatophores which contain pigments. Colour change occurs because the pigments can be expanded to fill the cell or contracted so they are less visible - the chromatophore itself does not change shape. Colour change is most highly developed in cephalopods such as octopus and cuttlefish, which can undergo rapid colour change in under a second. Pigment changes are neurally controlled in these animals, by nerves running to the chromatophores. Similar neurally-controlled colour change is found in some teleost fish, such as cichlids, many reef-fish, and flatfish. Many more lower vertebrates (agnathans, elasmobranches, teleosts, amphibians, and reptiles) show a slower colour change, mediated by hormones, which allows some camouflage. Here the pigmented cells usually contain only the dark brown pigment melanin, contained in melanophores, and colour change is limited to lightening or darkening of the general body tone to suit the background. The animal detects the colour of the background through its eyes and this information is passed to the anterior pituitary gland which can secrete a hormone called melanocyte stimulating hormone (MSH). This causes dispersal of the melanin in the melanophores and thus a darkening of the body colour.
Xenopus (clawed toad) is a permanently aquatic anuran amphibian from Africa. The tadpoles look and behave very differently from the familiar tadpoles of European frogs and toads. They hover in the water and feed by filtering small particles. The purpose of this practical is to observe colour changes, quantify the results in a simple way, and get an idea of the speed with which hormonally-controlled events can occur. The tadpoles have been kept on either dark or light backgrounds. You will transfer a small group of those from a black background to a white one, and vice versa, and observe the colour change. This is done by removing each animal at intervals of 20 minutes after changing the background, to a dish under a microscope, and observing the malanophores. The state of the melanophores can be assigned a number from 1 to 5, called the melanophore index, by comparison with a set of photographs provided. You can then plot the results on a graph and analyse them.
The melanophore index is a score rather than a measurement, and so unsuitable for the standard type of statistics that you may already be familiar with. We will use a simple nonparametric statistic, the Mann-Whitney test. This is equivalent to a t test comparing two sets of data, to ask the question: what is the probability that the two sets are measuring the same thing, any difference being just due to chance? You can do four tests, comparing:
For example to compare the data sets 2, 2, 2.5, 3, 3, 4 and 3.5, 4, 4.5, 4.5, 4.5, 5
2 2 2.5 3 3 3.5 4 4 4.5 4.5 4.5 5
1 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 121.5 1.5
3 4.5 4.5 6 7.5 7.5 10 10 10 12R1 = 1.5+ 1.5 + 3 + 4.5 + 4.5 + 7.5 = 22.5 and R2 = 6 +7.5 +10 +10 +10 +12 = 55.5.
Present your graph of the changes of melanophore index in the living tadpoles over time, using different symbols for the two groups. Show the calculation of the four statistical tests. What do these tell you about the colour changes of the two groups of tadpoles? Give a descriptive account of the experiment with tadpole tails exposed to melatonin and MSH, and the conclusions you reach about hormonal control in living tadpoles. Apart from larger sample sizes, how would you improve the experiment with tadpole tails - for example what controls could be used?