Abstract
Many animals have the potential to discriminate nonspectral colors. For humans, purple is the clearest example of a nonspectral color. It is perceived when two color cone types in the retina (blue and red) with nonadjacent spectral sensitivity curves are predominantly stimulated. Purple is considered nonspectral because no monochromatic light (such as from a rainbow) can evoke this simultaneous stimulation. Except in primates and bees, few behavioral experiments have directly examined nonspectral color discrimination, and little is known about nonspectral color perception in animals with more than three types of color photoreceptors. Birds have four color cone types (compared to three in humans) and might perceive additional nonspectral colors such as UV+red and UV+green. Can birds discriminate nonspectral colors, and are these colors behaviorally and ecologically relevant? Here, using comprehensive behavioral experiments, we show that wild hummingbirds can discriminate a variety of nonspectral colors. We also show that hummingbirds, relative to humans, likely perceive a greater proportion of natural colors as nonspectral. Our analysis of plumage and plant spectra reveals many colors that would be perceived as nonspectral by birds but not by humans: Birds' extra cone type allows them not just to see UV light but also to discriminate additional nonspectral colors. Our results support the idea that birds can distinguish colors throughout tetrachromatic color space and indicate that nonspectral color perception is vital for signaling and foraging. Since tetrachromacy appears to have evolved early in vertebrates, this capacity for rich nonspectral color perception is likely widespread.
Highlights
IntroductionPurple is the clearest example of a nonspectral color
Many animals have the potential to discriminate nonspectral colors
We trained wild hummingbirds to participate in color vision tests, which revealed that they can discriminate a variety of nonspectral colors, including UV+red, UV+green, purple, and UV+yellow
Summary
Purple is the clearest example of a nonspectral color It is perceived when two color cone types in the retina (blue and red) with nonadjacent spectral sensitivity curves are predominantly stimulated. If an animal possesses two interacting color cone types (i.e., there is a neural comparison of their outputs), it is a dichromat, with two dimensions of vision. It can discriminate lightness (intensity) and one dimension of hue/saturation. A trichromat has three interacting cone types, tetrachromats have four, and so on [2], with color vision stemming from neural comparisons of all three, four, or more cone types, respectively. Based on an analysis of ∼3,300 plumage and plant colors, we estimate that birds perceive many natural colors as nonspectral
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More From: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
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