4.4 Article

Gloger's rule in North American Barn Owls

Journal

AUK
Volume 132, Issue 2, Pages 321-332

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1642/AUK-14-167.1

Keywords

climate; geographic variation; Gloger's rule; melanin; Tyto alba

Categories

Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation
  2. American Natural History Museum in New York
  3. Swiss Academy of Sciences
  4. Basler Stiftung fur biologische Forschung
  5. Fondation du 450eme anniversaire of the University of Lausanne
  6. Fondation Agassiz of the University of Lausanne

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Studying the geographic variation of phenotypic traits can provide key information about the potential adaptive function of alternative phenotypes. Gloger's rule posits that animals should be dark- vs. light-colored in warm and humid vs. cold and dry habitats, respectively. The rule is based on the assumption that melanin pigments and/or dark coloration confer selective advantages in warm and humid regions. This rule may not apply, however, if genes for color are acting on other traits conferring fitness benefits in specific climes. Covariation between coloration and climate will therefore depend on the relative importance of coloration or melanin pigments and the genetically correlated physiological and behavioral processes that enable an animal to deal with climatic factors. The Barn Owl (Tyto alba) displays three melanin-based plumage traits, and we tested whether geographic variation in these traits at the scale of the North American continent supported Gloger's rule. An analysis of variation of pheomelanin-based reddish coloration and of the number and size of black feather spots in 1,369 museum skin specimens showed that geographic variation was correlated with ambient temperature and precipitation. Owls were darker red in color and displayed larger but fewer black feather spots in colder regions. Owls also exhibited more and larger black spots in regions where the climate was dry in winter. We propose that the associations between pigmentation and ambient temperature are of opposite sign for reddish coloration and spot size vs. the number of spots because selection exerted by climate (or a correlated variable) is plumage trait-specific or because plumage traits are genetically correlated with different adaptations.

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