Abstract

Today, there is good knowledge of the physiological basis of bird colour vision and how mathematical models can be used to predict visual thresholds. However, we still know only little about how colour vision changes between different viewing conditions. This limits the understanding of how colour signalling is configured in habitats where the light of the illumination and the background may shift dramatically. I examined how colour discrimination in zebra finch (Taeniopygia guttata) is affected by adaptation to different backgrounds. I trained finches in a two-alternative choice task, to choose between red discs displayed on backgrounds with different colours. I found that discrimination thresholds correlate with stimulus contrast to the background. Thresholds are low, and in agreement with model predictions, for a background with a red colour similar to the discs. For the most contrasting green background, thresholds are about five times higher than this. Subsequently, I trained the finches for the detection of single discs on a grey background. Detection thresholds are about 2.5 to 3 times higher than discrimination thresholds. This study demonstrates close similarities in human and bird colour vision, and the quantitative data offer a new possibility to account for shifting viewing conditions in colour vision models.

Highlights

  • Many animals use colourful ornaments as signals to attract the opposite sex during mate choice

  • This shift in achromatic contrast did not cause any change of discrimination thresholds

  • The results in this study show that in zebra finches, like humans [13], chromatic discrimination thresholds depend on the chromatic contrast between stimuli and the background

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Summary

Introduction

Many animals use colourful ornaments as signals to attract the opposite sex during mate choice. How such colour traits emerge and how trait variation is maintained are core questions for evolutionary biology [1,2]. Plumage colours cannot be fully appreciated by human perception as we have very different colour vision compared with birds [4]. We represent the bird view of colours by mathematical models, developed from an understanding of the physiological basis of colour vision.

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