Licht-im-Terrarium: Literaturdatenbank |
Secondi, J., Lepetz, V., & Théry, M. (2012). Male attractiveness is influenced by uv wavelengths in a newt species but not in its close relative. PLos ONE, 7(1), e30391. Added by: Sarina (2016-01-31 18:44:15) |
Resource type: Journal Article DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0030391 BibTeX citation key: Secondi2012 View all bibliographic details |
Categories: Englisch = English Keywords: Amphibien = Amphibians, Farbsehen = Color Vision, Ultraviolett = Ultraviolet, Verhalten = Behaviour Creators: Lepetz, Secondi, Théry Collection: PLos ONE |
Views: 1/784 Views index: % Popularity index: 1.25% |
Abstract |
Functional communication in the UV range has been reported in Invertebrates and all major groups of Vertebrates but Amphibians. Although perception in this wavelength range has been shown in a few species, UV signalling has not been demonstrated in this group. One reason may be that in lentic freshwater habitats, litter decomposition generates dissolved organic carbon that absorbs UV radiation and thus hinders its use for visual signalling. We tested the effect of male UV characteristics on female sexual preference in two newt species that experience contrasting levels of UV water transmission when breeding. We analysed water spectral characteristics of a sample of breeding ponds in both species. We quantified male ventral coloration and measured male attractiveness under two lighting conditions (UV present, UV absent) using a no-choice female preference design. UV transmission was higher in Our study is the first report of functional UV-based communication in Amphibians. Interestingly, male spectral characteristics and female preferences were consistent with the differences in habitat observed between the two species as Added by: Sarina |