Dynamic eye colour as an honest signal of aggression
Heathcote, R; Darden, S; Troscianko, J; et al.Lawson, MRM; Brown, AM; Laker, PR; Naisbett-Jones, LC; MacGregor, HEA; Ramnarine, I; Croft, DP
Date: 4 June 2018
Article
Journal
Current Biology
Publisher
Elsevier
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Animal eyes are some of the most widely recognisable structures in nature. Due to their salience
to predators and prey, most research has focussed on how animals hide or camouflage their
eyes [1]. However, across all vertebrate Classes many species actually express brightly
coloured or conspicuous eyes, suggesting they may have also ...
Animal eyes are some of the most widely recognisable structures in nature. Due to their salience
to predators and prey, most research has focussed on how animals hide or camouflage their
eyes [1]. However, across all vertebrate Classes many species actually express brightly
coloured or conspicuous eyes, suggesting they may have also evolved a signalling function. Nevertheless, perhaps due to the difficulty with experimentally manipulating eye appearance, very few species beyond humans [2] have been experimentally shown to use eyes as signals [3]. Using staged behavioural trials we show that Trinidadian guppies (Poecilia reticulata), which can rapidly change their iris colour, predominantly express conspicuous eye colouration when performing aggressive behaviours towards smaller conspecifics. We then show, using a
novel visually-realistic robotic system to create a mismatch between signal and relative competitive ability, that eye colour is used to honestly signal aggressive motivation. Specifically, robotic ‘cheats’, i.e. smaller and thus less-competitive robotic fish that displayed aggressive eye colouration when defending a food patch, attracted greater food competition from larger real fish. Our study suggests that eye colour may be an under-appreciated aspect of signalling in animals, shows the utility of our new biomimetic robotic system for investigations in animal behaviour, and provides rare experimental evidence that socially-mediated costs towards low-quality individuals may maintain the honesty of dynamic colour signals.
Psychology - old structure
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