Abstract

All seals and cetaceans have lost at least one of two ancestral cone classes and should therefore be colour-blind. Nevertheless, earlier studies showed that these marine mammals can discriminate colours and a colour vision mechanism has been proposed which contrasts signals from cones and rods. However, these earlier studies underestimated the brightness discrimination abilities of these animals, so that they could have discriminated colours using brightness only. Using a psychophysical discrimination experiment, we showed that a harbour seal can solve a colour discrimination task by means of brightness discrimination alone. Performing a series of experiments in which two harbour seals had to discriminate the brightness of colours, we also found strong evidence for purely scotopic (rod-based) vision at light levels that lead to mesopic (rod–cone-based) vision in other mammals. This finding speaks against rod–cone-based colour vision in harbour seals. To test for colour-blindness, we used a cognitive approach involving a harbour seal trained to use a concept of same and different. We tested this seal with pairs of isoluminant stimuli that were either same or different in colour. If the seal had perceived colour, it would have responded to colour differences between stimuli. However, the seal responded with “same”, providing strong evidence for colour-blindness.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s10071-014-0823-3) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Seeing the world in colour allows for reliable object detection and recognition under variable illumination

  • Using a psychophysical discrimination experiment, we showed that a harbour seal can solve a colour discrimination task by means of brightness discrimination alone

  • Performing a series of experiments in which two harbour seals had to discriminate the brightness of colours, we found strong evidence for purely scotopic vision at light levels that lead to mesopic vision in other mammals

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Summary

Introduction

Seeing the world in colour allows for reliable object detection and recognition under variable illumination. Most terrestrial mammals possess two spectral classes of cones, SWS1 (short-wavelength-sensitive) and LWS (long-wavelength-sensitive) (Jacobs 2009; Kelber et al 2003; Peichl 2005). Some species of whales [Balaenidae, Balaenopteroidea, the Sowerby’s beaked whale (Mesoplodon bidens), the giant sperm whale (Physeter macrocephalus), and the pygmy sperm whale (Kogia breviceps)] have even lost both cone types and are rod monochromats (Meredith et al 2013).

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