Journal article
Infrared camouflage in leaf-sitting frogs: A cautionary tale on adaptive convergence
D Stuart-Fox, KJ Rankin, M Shah Scott, LY Wang, AM Franklin
Journal of the Royal Society Interface | The Royal Society | Published : 2025
Abstract
Many cryptic green animals match leaves in invisible near-infrared (NIR) wavelengths. This observation is an enduring puzzle because animals do not see NIR light, so NIR background matching is unlikely to contribute to visual camouflage. Two alternative explanations have been proposed - infrared camouflage (i.e. matching the temperature of the background) and thermoregulation - but neither hypothesis has been experimentally tested. To test these hypotheses, we developed bilayer coatings that mimicked the reflectivity of green leaf-sitting frogs with high NIR (HNIR) or low NIR (LNIR) reflectance. Under a solar simulator in the laboratory, agar model frogs with LNIR reflectance heated up more ..
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Grants
Awarded by Australian Research Council