Abstract

Animals from many taxa, from snakes and crabs to caterpillars and lobsters, change appearance with age, but the reasons why this occurs are rarely tested.We show the importance that ontogenetic changes in coloration have on the camouflage of the green shore crabs (Carcinus maenas), known for their remarkable phenotypic variation and plasticity in colour and pattern.In controlled conditions, we reared juvenile crabs of two shades, pale or dark, on two background types simulating different habitats for 10 weeks.In contrast to expectations for reversible colour change, crabs did not tune their background match to specific microhabitats, but instead, and regardless of treatment, all developed a uniform dark green phenotype. This parallels changes in shore crab appearance with age observed in the field.Next, we undertook a citizen science experiment at the Natural History Museum London, where human subjects (“predators”) searched for crabs representing natural colour variation from different habitats, simulating predator vision.In concert, crabs were not hardest to find against their original habitat, but instead, the dark green phenotype was hardest to detect against all backgrounds.The evolution of camouflage can be better understood by acknowledging that the optimal phenotype to hide from predators may change over the life history of many animals, including the utilization of a generalist camouflage strategy. A plain language summary is available for this article.

Highlights

  • Camouflage is key to survival in numerous organisms

  • First we study if juvenile shore crabs adjust their appearance within and over successive moults in order to increase their resemblance to heterogeneous substrates

  • We show that ontogenetic changes in coloration can facilitate improvement in camouflage and alter predation risk in shore crabs

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Summary

Introduction

Camouflage is key to survival in numerous organisms. It is a widespread anti-predator strategy, whereby organisms avoid detection or recognition by resembling the general background or specific objects within the habitat (Cott 1940, Ruxton et al 2004, Stevens and Merilaita 2011, Nokelainen and Stevens 2016). The mechanisms and implications of ontogenetic colour change for survival remain significantly unexplored. This is in part because quantifying long-term changes in camouflage while controlling for different backgrounds is challenging, and because the majority of work to date has focussed on short-term plastic and/or reversible change

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