Abstract

Sexual signals often compromise camouflage because of their conspicuousness. Pigmentation patterns, on the contrary, aid in camouflage. It was hypothesized that a particular type of pattern—barred plumage in birds, whereby pigmented bars extend across feathers—could simultaneously signal individual quality, because disruptions of these patterns should be perceptually salient at close range and help assess plumage condition. Here we show that common waxbills (Estrilda astrild), which have extensive barred plumage, have more regular patterns as adults than as juveniles, and that adult males have more regular patterns than females. Both these differences are indicative of sexual signalling in species with conventional sex roles. More regular barred plumage was related to better body condition in adult males. Colour ornamentation traits were also related to aspects of quality, either the same as barred plumage (body condition) or a different one (good feather development), supporting both the ‘redundant message’ and the ‘multiple message’ hypotheses for the coexistence of multiple sexual signals. Although receiver responses to the regularity of barred plumage were not studied here, research on other species has shown that barred plumage can mediate social interactions. We conclude that using barred plumage as a signal of quality helps circumvent the functional compromise between camouflage and communication.

Highlights

  • Many sexual signals of animals, such as vivid colours, strong scents or loud songs, are conspicuous and can attract the attention of predators [1]

  • As predicted by the hypothesis that the regularity of barred plumage evolved as a sexual signal, adults had on average higher resREG scores than juveniles (t476 = 4.559; p < 0.001; figure 3a) and, among adults, males had higher resREG than females (t422 = 3.561; p < 0.001; figure 3b)

  • The strongest effect was that of body condition, present in six of the best models (RI = 0.82), followed by effects of geography PC1, ectoparasites and the extent of fault bars

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Summary

Introduction

Many sexual signals of animals, such as vivid colours, strong scents or loud songs, are conspicuous and can attract the attention of predators [1]. Many animals manage a compromise between the two by modulating signalling: for. Example, hiding colour patches when not signalling actively, or withdrawing from signalling when 2 predation risk is higher [2]. An intriguing alternative possibility is that some camouflage traits accommodate signalling components, overcoming the functional compromise between camouflage and signalling. Blue and yellow patterns common in reef fishes are conspicuous at close range but blend into a cryptic colour at a distance [3]

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