Abstract

BackgroundBird plumage exhibits a diversity of colors that serve functional roles ranging from signaling to camouflage and thermoregulation. However, birds must maintain a balance between evolving colorful signals to attract mates, minimizing conspicuousness to predators, and optimizing adaptation to climate conditions. Examining plumage color macroevolution provides a framework for understanding this dynamic interplay over phylogenetic scales. Plumage evolution due to a single overarching process, such as selection, may generate the same macroevolutionary pattern of color variation across all body regions. In contrast, independent processes may partition plumage and produce region-specific patterns. To test these alternative scenarios, we collected color data from museum specimens of an ornate clade of birds, the Australasian lorikeets, using visible-light and UV-light photography, and comparative methods. We predicted that the diversification of homologous feather regions, i.e., patches, known to be involved in sexual signaling (e.g., face) would be less constrained than patches on the back and wings, where new color states may come at the cost of crypsis. Because environmental adaptation may drive evolution towards or away from color states, we tested whether climate more strongly covaried with plumage regions under greater or weaker macroevolutionary constraint.ResultsWe found that alternative macroevolutionary models and varying rates best describe color evolution, a pattern consistent with our prediction that different plumage regions evolved in response to independent processes. Modeling plumage regions independently, in functional groups, and all together showed that patches with similar macroevolutionary models clustered together into distinct regions (e.g., head, wing, belly), which suggests that plumage does not evolve as a single trait in this group. Wing patches, which were conserved on a macroevolutionary scale, covaried with climate more strongly than plumage regions (e.g., head), which diversified in a burst.ConclusionsOverall, our results support the hypothesis that the extraordinary color diversity in the lorikeets was generated by a mosaic of evolutionary processes acting on plumage region subsets. Partitioning of plumage regions in different parts of the body provides a mechanism that allows birds to evolve bright colors for signaling and remain hidden from predators or adapt to local climatic conditions.

Highlights

  • Bird plumage exhibits a diversity of colors that serve functional roles ranging from signaling to camouflage and thermoregulation

  • Macroevolutionary model selection We found that independent patterns and rates have generated color variation in the lorikeets (Fig. 1), but our results were more nuanced than our proposed alternative scenarios (Fig. 2)

  • One extra level of complexity was that best-fit models for individual patches varied among principal component (PC) axes (Figs. 3 and 4)

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Summary

Introduction

Bird plumage exhibits a diversity of colors that serve functional roles ranging from signaling to camouflage and thermoregulation. Independent processes may partition plumage and produce region-specific patterns To test these alternative scenarios, we collected color data from museum specimens of an ornate clade of birds, the Australasian lorikeets, using visible-light and UV-light photography, and comparative methods. Because environmental adaptation may drive evolution towards or away from color states, we tested whether climate more strongly covaried with plumage regions under greater or weaker macroevolutionary constraint. The major factors which drive the evolution of plumage color are climatic adaptation, crypsis, and sexual selection [4, 9]. Examining the macroevolutionary trends of plumage within brightly colored clades provides a framework for understanding how natural and sexual selection interact over phylogenetic scales [9]

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