Biosystems Science Course, The Graduate School of Life Science, Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Hokkaido, Japan.
Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, Hokkaido University, Kita 10 Nishi 8, Kita-ku, Sapporo, Hokkaido, 060-0810, Japan.
Anim Cogn. 2022 Oct;25(5):1271-1279. doi: 10.1007/s10071-022-01609-5. Epub 2022 Mar 16.
Many animals have polka dot patterns on their body surface, some of which are known to have signalling functions; however, their evolutionary origins remain unclear. Dot patterns can trigger a fear response (trypophobia) in humans and are known to function as aposematic signals in non-human animals, suggesting that dots may deserve attention for biological reasons. Interestingly in many birds, plumage dot patterns serve for social/sexual signalling. To understand their evolution, we have focused on the sensory bias hypothesis, which predicts the role of pre-existing sensory preference driven by natural selection in shaping signal design. Our previous phylogenetic comparative study supported the hypothesis and showed that diet-driven visual preference promoted the evolution of plumage patterns, as there was an evolutionary correlation between termite-eating (white roundish gregarious prey) and the presence of plumage dot patterns in species of the family Estrildidae. This suggests that these species possess an intrinsic preference for dots. To test this, we compared the responses of an Estrildid species with dot plumage pattern (star finch Neochmia ruficauda) towards simultaneously presented monochrome-printed white dot vs white stripe patterns under both food-deprived and -supplied conditions. Overall, star finches preferred dots to stripes. They showed foraging-like behaviours almost only toward dots when hungry and gazed at dots frequently even when food was available, suggesting both hunger-related and hunger-neutral dot preferences. These results are rather surprising, given how strongly the subjects were attracted to abstract dot patterns without organic structure, but provided good support for the sensory bias hypothesis.
许多动物的体表都有斑点图案,其中一些已知具有信号功能;然而,它们的进化起源尚不清楚。点图案会在人类中引发恐惧反应(密集恐惧症),并且已知在非人类动物中作为警戒信号发挥作用,这表明点可能具有生物学上的重要意义。有趣的是,在许多鸟类中,羽毛斑点图案用于社交/性信号。为了了解它们的进化,我们专注于感官偏好假说,该假说预测了自然选择驱动的预先存在的感官偏好在塑造信号设计中的作用。我们之前的系统发育比较研究支持了这一假说,并表明饮食驱动的视觉偏好促进了羽毛图案的进化,因为在 Estrildidae 科的物种中,存在与白蚁有关的觅食行为(白色圆形群居猎物)与羽毛斑点图案之间存在进化相关性。这表明这些物种具有内在的对点的偏好。为了验证这一点,我们比较了具有点状羽毛图案的 Estrildid 物种(星雀 Neochmia ruficauda)在饥饿和饱腹两种条件下,对同时呈现的单色印刷白点与白条图案的反应。总的来说,星雀更喜欢圆点而不是条纹。当它们饥饿时,它们几乎只表现出觅食行为,即使有食物,它们也会频繁地注视着圆点,这表明它们对点有饥饿相关和非饥饿相关的偏好。这些结果令人惊讶,因为这些实验对象对点图案的吸引力非常强烈,尽管这些点图案没有有机结构,但这些结果很好地支持了感官偏好假说。