Abstract

Camouflage is one of the most widespread antipredator defences, and its mechanistic basis has attracted considerable interest in recent years. The effectiveness of camouflage depends on the interaction between an animal's appearance and its background. Concealment can therefore be improved by changes to an animal's own appearance, by behaviorally selecting an optimal background, or by modifying the background to better match the animal's own appearance. Research to date has largely focussed on the first of these mechanisms, whereas there has been little work on the second and almost none on the third. Even though a number of animal species may potentially modify their environment to improve individual‐specific camouflage, this has rarely if ever been quantitatively investigated, or its adaptive value tested. Kittlitz's plovers (Charadrius pecuarius) use material (stones and vegetation) to cover their nests when predators approach, providing concealment that is independent of the inflexible appearance of the adult or eggs, and that can be adjusted to suit the local surrounding background. We used digital imaging and predator vision modeling to investigate the camouflage properties of covered nests, and whether their camouflage affected their survival. The plovers' nest‐covering materials were consistent with a trade‐off between selecting materials that matched the color of the eggs, while resulting in poorer nest pattern and contrast matching to the nest surroundings. Alternatively, the systematic use of materials with high‐contrast and small‐pattern grain sizes could reflect a deliberate disruptive coloration strategy, whereby high‐contrast material breaks up the telltale outline of the clutch. No camouflage variables predicted nest survival. Our study highlights the potential for camouflage to be enhanced by background modification. This provides a flexible system for modifying an animal's conspicuousness, to which the main limitation may be the available materials rather than the animal's appearance.

Highlights

  • Camouflage is a key mechanism for evading predators and offers striking and intuitive examples of natural selection (Wallace, 1867)

  • Considerable research over recent years has focussed on the mechanistic basis of camouflage, typically using artificially made or manipulated stimuli (Cuthill et al, 2005; Schaefer & Stobbe, 2006; Webster, Hassall, Herdman, Godin, & Sherratt, 2013), or laboratory experiments (Chiao, Chubb, Buresch, Siemann, & Hanlon, 2009; Kang, Stevens, Moon, Lee, & Jablonski, 2014b; Lovell, Ruxton, Langridge, & Spencer, 2013; Merilaita & Dimitrova, 2014; Skelhorn, Rowland, Speed, & Ruxton, 2010)

  • Any camouflage variables that do vary consistently between zones suggest that background matching is imperfect; additional interactions with nesting material and the match to the colors and patterns of the eggs themselves test for limitations and trade-­offs in nest appearance

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Camouflage is a key mechanism for evading predators and offers striking and intuitive examples of natural selection (Wallace, 1867). ­strategies used to conceal nests because the raw materials providing color and pattern matching are not limited by the adults’ or the eggs’ phenotypic appearance Their nests provide little or no structural or mechanical protection to the eggs, which lie within a shallow scrape in the ground, covering may confer some thermal protection. If Kittlitz’s plovers cover their nests in order to achieve perfect background matching, we should find no consistent difference between the colors, patterns, and other appearance attributes of the nests and those of their local surroundings We tested this by measuring the appearance of the nests at a number of distances, creating concentric zones to take into account the gradually changing. We tested whether egg appearance and nest modifications predicted the likelihood of nest predation

| METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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