Animals with Disruptive Colouration
While background matching and disruptive
colouration can seem similar in aspects, they differ in one fundamental way.
Background matching is ideal for one specific area (or background), however
disruptive colouration can suit many environments and poses to confuse (Cuthill
& Szekely, 2009).
The red-necked nightjar (Caprimulgus
ruficollis) are birds that lay their eggs on
the bare ground (Saez-Gomez et al., 2018). This is a very dangerous
behaviour for these birds as there are many ground dwelling predators about,
like the Iberian lynx (Lynx
pardinus) (Saez-Gomez
et al., 2018). To protect
themselves against these hazards they have developed incredible
disruptive colouration. The contrasting colouration of their feathers interacts
with their background and often blurs their outline. It camouflages the red-necked
nightjar so it is able to sit on it’s nest long enough to produce offspring. If
the nightjar’s disruptive colouration is good enough it will avoid predators and
pass on it’s amazing camouflage genes.
![]() |
red-necked nightjar (Caprimulgus ruficollis) |
Interestingly, a theory by Cott (1940)
discusses the disruptive colouration used to camouflage eyes on animals. As
eyes can be round, coloured or dark and can stand out while trying to hide,
organisms have developed ways of concealing them. This can be by breaking up
the eye with colour, a dark “mask” running across the face or mottling. There
are many animal taxa that use this technique (Cuthill & Szekely, 2009).
One
example of eye distortion using disruptive colouration is the southern leopard frog (Rana
sphenocephala) (Cuthill
& Szekely, 2009). As
you can see in the picture, the southern leopard frog has a very thing dark
strip from its nose to back, including the eye. Directly above the dark line
there is a golden coloured strip that matches the placement of the darker line.
The golden strip is matched within the eye, just at the top. These strips of
colour disrupt the roundness of the eye itself (Cuthill & Szekely, 2009).
The colouration on the rest of the body is mottled, with another golden line
above its mouth. Like the red-necked nightjar, the southern leopard frog is using
its disruptive colouration to pass on its genes to the next generation.
![]() |
southern leopard frog (Rana sphenocephala) |
References
Cott, H. B. 1940 Adaptive
coloration in animals. Methuen
Publishing, Oxford University Press, UK.
Cuthill C., & Szekely A.
(2009). Coincident Disruptive Coloration. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B:
Biological Sciences. 364, 480-496.
Saez-Gomez P., Palacios S., &
Camacho C. (2018). Landscape Change Promotes the Emergence of a Rare
Predator-Prey Interaction. Food Webs. 15,
1-3.
Nightjars are really pretty birds, and their camouflage is really astounding (I have been lucky enough to see them). Do you think that disruptive colouration is controlled by multiple genes?
ReplyDelete