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Plumage reflectance and the objective assessment of avian sexual dichromatism

journal contribution
posted on 1999-02-01, 00:00 authored by I Cuthill, Andy Bennett, J Partridge, E Maier
Assessment of color using human vision (or standards based thereon) is central to tests of many evolutionary hypotheses. Yet fundamental differences in color Vision between humans and other animals call this approach into question. Here we use techniques for objectively assessing color patterns that avoid reliance on species-specific (e.g., human) perception. Reflectance spectra are the invariant features that we expect the animal's color cognition to have evolved to extract. We performed multivariate analyses on principal components derived from >2,600 reflectance spectra (300-720 nm) sampled in a stratified random design from different body regions of male and female starlings in breeding plumage. Starlings possess spatially complex plumage patterns and extensive areas of iridescence. Our study revealed previously unnoticed sex differences in plumage coloration and the nature of iridescent and noniridescent sex differences. Sex differences occurred in some body regions bur not others, were more pronounced at some wavelengths (both ultraviolet and human visible), and involved differences in mean reflectance and spectral shape. Discriminant analysis based on principal components were sufficient to sex correctly 100% of our sample. If hidden sexual dichromatism is widespread, then it has important implications for classifications of animals as mono- or dimorphic and for taxonomic and conservation purposes.

History

Journal

American Naturalist

Volume

153

Issue

2

Pagination

183 - 200

Publisher

University of Chicago Press

Location

Chicago, Ill.

ISSN

0003-0147

eISSN

1537-5323

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

1999, University of Chicago Press