Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/64638
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Type: Journal article
Title: Are avian eggshell colours effective intraspecific communication signals in the Muscicapoidea? A perceptual modelling approach
Author: Cassey, P.
Ewen, J.
Marshall, N.
Vorobyev, M.
Blackburn, T.
Hauber, M.
Citation: IBIS: The International Journal of Avian Science, 2009; 151(4):689-698
Publisher: British Ornithologists Union
Issue Date: 2009
ISSN: 0019-1019
1474-919X
Statement of
Responsibility: 
Phillip Cassey, John G. Ewen, N. Justin Marshall, Misha Vorobyev, Tim M. Blackburn & Mark E. Hauber
Abstract: Diversity in the colour and appearance of avian eggshells has been proposed to serve a variety of visual functions, including crypsis from predation, mimicry and discrimination in facultative and obligate brood parasitism, and sexually selected intraspecific signalling of the extent of maternal investment in the egg. Here, we apply a photoreceptor noise-limited colour opponent model of avian perception to assess a necessary corollary of any intraspecific signalling hypothesis, namely that individual birds are able to discriminate between colours of eggs in different conspecific clutches. Clutches from 46 species in the superfamily Muscicapoidea were measured at the Natural History Museum collection in Tring, UK. The results demonstrate that, for these particular species, most eggs are predicted not to be easily discriminable from those in other conspecific clutches in terms of the shells’ background coloration. These findings are of fundamental concern to any signalling hypothesis that looks to explain the evolution of avian-visible egg colour polymorphism through selection at the intraspecific level. Importantly, future studies should combine both the proximate mechanisms and the ultimate functions of trait variability when testing hypotheses of the variability in eggshell appearance.
Keywords: Communication
sexual selection
signals
visual perception
Rights: Copyright 2009 The Authors Journal compilation Copyright 2009 British Ornithologists’ Union
DOI: 10.1111/j.1474-919X.2009.00953.x
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1474-919x.2009.00953.x
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest
Earth and Environmental Sciences publications
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