Nov.
16, 2009 — Research at the Lund University Vision Group can now show that the
color vision of birds stops working considerably earlier in the course of the
day than was previously believed, in fact, in the twilight. Birds need between
5 and 20 times as much light as humans to see colors. It has long been known
that birds have highly developed color vision that vastly surpasses that of
humans. Birds see both more colors and ultraviolet light. However, it was not
known what amount of light is necessary for birds to see colors, which has limited
the validity of all research on this color vision to bright sunlight only.
"Using
behavioral experiments we can now demonstrate that birds lose their color
vision in the twilight and show just how much light is needed for birds to be
able to interpret color signals," says Olle Lind, a doctoral candidate at
the Department of Cell and Organism Biology.
For
humans and horses, color vision ceases to work after dusk, at light intensities
roughly corresponding to bright moonlight. However, the light threshold is not
the same for all vertebrates. Geckos, for instance, can see colors at night. In
the experiments performed by the Lund University Vision Group, the color vision
of birds stopped working at light intensities corresponding to what prevails
shortly after the sun goes down. Birds need between 5 and 20 times as much
light as humans to see colors. Among all the vertebrates tested thus far, birds
are the first to lose their color vision in the twilight, even though they are
the vertebrates that probably see colors best of all in the daylight.
With
these findings it is now possible to start to draw conclusions about how birds
use their color vision at dawn and dusk. The findings also direct our focus to
previous research about how important color is when it comes to eggs or begging
baby birds in enclosed nests. Inside enclosed nests it is dark even when the
sun is bright outside.
"Against
the background of our new discoveries, we should now re-evaluate earlier
research about how birds perceive the color of their eggs and their young in
the nest," says Olle Lind.
The
research findings were recently published in Journal of Experimental Biology
2009, 212: pp. 3693-3699.
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