4.5 Article

Carotenoid intake during early life mediates ontogenetic colour shifts and dynamic colour change during adulthood

Journal

ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR
Volume 187, Issue -, Pages 121-135

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.anbehav.2022.03.007

Keywords

adaptive coloration; husbandry; Rhacophorus nigropalmatus; Wallace's flying frog

Funding

  1. Austrian Academy of Sciences [OAW, DOC 25701]
  2. Vienna Zoo

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Carotenoids play a crucial role in animal coloration, influencing both ontogenetic and dynamic color changes. In the Wallace's flying frog, a high carotenoid diet facilitates rapid and reversible body color changes, while the absence of carotenoid supplementation leads to dull coloration. Dynamic color changes are observed in response to tactile stressors and changing light conditions, serving as camouflage and UV protection.
Carotenoids play an import role as one of the most prevalent pigments in animals. Carotenoid-based coloration accounts for striking sexually and naturally selected colour adaptations. Several anurans (frogs and toads) change body coloration either slowly and permanently between life stages (ontogenetic colour change), or rapidly and temporarily within minutes or hours (dynamic colour change). We investigated ontogenetic colour change from orange to green morphs in the Wallace's flying frog, Rhacophorus nigropalmatus, and tested the influence of dietary carotenoids on colour change during post metamorphic development. At the age of 9 months, while all individuals still possessed orange-red body coloration, a 20-week-long feeding experiment was performed by supplying the frogs with either no carotenoid supplements or dietary carotenoids once or four times per week. A high carotenoid diet resulted in a faster increase in green colour chroma as well as higher levels of green and carotenoid chroma of back coloration. Less or no carotenoid supplementation led to an increase in UV-blue chroma, contributing to a dull turquoise appearance often observed in captive-bred and captive-raised anurans. In addition, we showed for the first time that Wallace's flying frogs also perform dynamic colour changes. We tested dynamic changes triggered either by 2 min tactile handling or varying 1 h dark and light conditions. Our results demonstrate that a high carotenoid diet facilitates rapid and reversible change of body coloration in response to a tactile stressor, an adaptation absent in frogs receiving no carotenoids. Dynamic colour changes were likewise observed in response to changing light conditions presumably camouflaging individuals and providing protection from UV irradiation. The ontogenetic and dynamic pigmentation changes are discussed in relation to mechanism and as a likely strategy to avoid predation both at different life stages and in different environments.(c) 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/ by/4.0/).

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