Journal article

Conspicuous males suffer higher predation risk: Visual modeling and experimental evidence from lizards

DM Stuart-Fox, A Moussalli, NJ Marshall, IPF Owens

Animal Behaviour | Published : 2003

Abstract

Colour pattern variation is a striking and widespread phenomenon. Differential predation risk between individuals is often invoked to explain colour variation, but empirical support for this hypothesis is equivocal. We investigated differential conspicuousness and predation risk in two species of Australian rock dragons, Ctenophorus decresii and C. vadnappa. To humans, the coloration of males of these species varies between 'bright' and 'dull'. Visual modelling based on objective colour measurements and the spectral sensitivities of avian visual pigments showed that dragon colour variants are differentially conspicuous to the visual system of avian predators when viewed against the natural b..

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University of Melbourne Researchers