Fig. 3. Quantitative analyses of melanophore accumulation in wild-type D.
rerio and D. albolineatus and their respective kit
mutants. In D. rerio (upper plot) wild-type melanophore densities
(means±1 s.e.) are relatively constant during the first half of pigment
pattern metamorphosis (
15-36 dpf) but then increase dramatically during
the second half of pigment pattern metamorphosis (
37-49 dpf),
corresponding to the appearance of new melanophores within stripes. Note that
total melanophore numbers (as opposed to densities) increase throughout
metamorphosis. In kit mutants there are no melanophores until late
metamorphosis when residual LM melanophores develop. In D.
albolineatus (lower plot), wild-type melanophore densities increase more
slowly through metamorphosis and never reach the same maximum as in wild-type
D. rerio. kit mutant D. albolineatus completely lack
melanophores during early pigment pattern metamorphosis, then recover a few
residual LM melanophores during late pigment pattern metamorphosis. Vertical
bars to the right of plots indicate the inferred final contributions of EM and
LM melanophores to the different pigment patterns. The timing of pigment
pattern metamorphosis was somewhat delayed in these analyses compared with
previous studies, presumably owing to slight differences in rearing
conditions.