School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, , Tempe, AZ 85287, USA.
Biol Lett. 2013 Dec 11;9(6):20130892. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2013.0892. Print 2013.
Many animals display static coloration (e.g. of feathers or fur) that can serve as a reliable sexual or social signal, but the communication function of rapidly changing colours (as in chameleons and cephalopods) is poorly understood. We used recently developed photographic and mathematical modelling tools to examine how rapid colour changes of veiled chameleons Chamaeleo calyptratus predict aggressive behaviour during male-male competitions. Males that achieved brighter stripe coloration were more likely to approach their opponent, and those that attained brighter head coloration were more likely to win fights; speed of head colour change was also an important predictor of contest outcome. This correlative study represents the first quantification of rapid colour change using organism-specific visual models and provides evidence that the rate of colour change, in addition to maximum display coloration, can be an important component of communication. Interestingly, the body and head locations of the relevant colour signals map onto the behavioural displays given during specific contest stages, with lateral displays from a distance followed by directed, head-on approaches prior to combat, suggesting that different colour change signals may evolve to communicate different information (motivation and fighting ability, respectively).
许多动物表现出静态的颜色(如羽毛或皮毛的颜色),这些颜色可以作为可靠的性或社会信号,但快速变化的颜色(如变色龙和头足类动物)的交流功能却知之甚少。我们使用最近开发的摄影和数学建模工具来研究面纱变色龙 Chamaeleo calyptratus 的快速颜色变化如何预测雄性竞争中的攻击行为。颜色条纹变得更鲜艳的雄性更有可能接近对手,而头部颜色变得更鲜艳的雄性更有可能赢得战斗;头部颜色变化的速度也是比赛结果的重要预测因素。这项相关性研究是首次使用特定于生物体的视觉模型对快速颜色变化进行量化,并提供了证据表明,除了最大的显示颜色外,颜色变化的速度也可以成为交流的重要组成部分。有趣的是,相关颜色信号的身体和头部位置与特定比赛阶段给出的行为表现相对应,远距离的侧面展示,然后是直接的、面对面的接近,然后是战斗,这表明不同的颜色变化信号可能会进化以传达不同的信息(分别是动机和战斗能力)。