Some double cones have members with same opsin (twin cones), while others have members with different cone types (members have a different spectral sensitivity).[3] Behavioural research on the reef dwelling triggerfish Rhinecanthus aculeatus has provided evidence that individual members of double cones can act as independent channels of colour information.[2]
In a book about vision in fishes,[3] James Bowmaker writes that double cones tend to be sensitive to longer wavelengths of light than single cones. He also states that the single cones are usually smaller than the individual members of the double cones.[3][4]
Further reading
Walls, G. L. (1942). The vertebrate eye and its adaptive radiation: Bloomfield Hills, Mich. : Cranbrook Institute of Science. esp. pp 58-63.
^ abcBowmaker, J. (1990). "Visual pigments of fishes". In Douglas, R; Djamgoz, M. (eds.). The Visual System of Fish. Chapman and Hall. pp. 81–107. doi:10.1007/978-94-009-0411-8_4.
^Downing, J; Djamgoz, M; Bowmaker, J (1986). "Photoreceptors of cyprinid fish: morphological and spectral characteristics". Journal of Comparative Physiology A. 159: 859–868. doi:10.1007/bf00603739. S2CID21456736.