| Literature DB >> 29802387 |
Karin Kjernsmo1, Joanna R Hall2,3, Cara Doyle2, Nadia Khuzayim2, Innes C Cuthill2, Nicholas E Scott-Samuel3, Heather M Whitney2.
Abstract
Iridescence is a taxonomically widespread and striking form of animal coloration, yet despite advances in understanding its mechanism, its function and adaptive value are poorly understood. We test a counterintuitive hypothesis about the function of iridescence: that it can act as camouflage through interference with object recognition. Using an established insect visual model (Bombus terrestris), we demonstrate that both diffraction grating and multilayer iridescence impair shape recognition (although not the more subtle form of diffraction grating seen in some flowers), supporting the idea that both strategies can be effective means of camouflage. We conclude that iridescence produces visual signals that can confuse potential predators, and this might explain the high frequency of iridescence in many animal taxa.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29802387 PMCID: PMC5970230 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-26571-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Experimental stimuli and results. Mean (±95% CI) proportion of visits to the conditioned stimuli for each treatment group, with corresponding photos (top two rows) and high magnification surface eSEM images (bottom row) of the four different treatment groups (from left to right; Matte, Floral diffraction grating, synthetic Diffraction grating and Multi-layer interference). The dashed line indicates the 50% expectation (i.e. the expected success rate for random foraging).
Figure 2Reflectance spectra of the four treatment groups. Shown are estimated means and 95% CI from Generalized Additive Models with 20-degree-of-freedom spline smoothers. The triangles indicate the wavelength of maximum reflectance for each of the four treatment groups (each N = 9) at θ = 0°, 15°, 30° and 45°. The background (BG) is included in all graphs for comparison but was only measured at the relevant angle of θ = 0°.