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Variation in the appearance of guppy color patterns to guppies and their predators under different visual conditions
Color patterns of natural populations of guppies (Poecilia reticulata) are a compromise between sexual selection and predation avoidance. Field data on ambient light spectra, water transmission spectra, courtship and attack distances, and cone pigments of guppies and their predators were used to calculate measures of conspicuousness of guppies under various combinations of visual conditions and vision. The results suggest that color patterns are relatively more conspicuous to guppies at the times and places of courtship and relatively less conspicuous at the times and places of maximum predator risk. Some implications to the evolution of vision, visual communication and behavior are discussed.
History
Journal
Vision researchVolume
31Issue
3Pagination
587 - 608Publisher
ElsevierLocation
Kidlington, Eng.Publisher DOI
ISSN
0042-6989eISSN
1878-5646Language
engPublication classification
CN.1 Other journal articleCopyright notice
1991, ElsevierUsage metrics
Categories
No categories selectedKeywords
anti-predator defensebrightness contrastcolorcolor contrastcolor patternsCrenicichlacolor visioncontrastcrypsisenvironmental lightPoecilia Rivulus Macrobrachiumsexual selectionAnimalsColor PerceptionLightMathematicsPattern Recognition, VisualPoeciliaPredatory BehaviorSensory ThresholdsSex PreselectionVisual PerceptionScience & TechnologySocial SciencesLife Sciences & BiomedicineNeurosciencesOphthalmologyPsychologyNeurosciences & NeurologyANTIPREDATOR DEFENSERIVULUSMACROBRACHIUMPOECILIA-RETICULATAFEMALE PREFERENCESPECTRAL SENSITIVITYTRINIDAD GUPPYMATE CHOICEPIGMENTSFISHESEVOLUTIONGOLDFISH