Of Rarity and Symbolism: Understanding Human Perceptions of Charismatic Color Morphs

Coloration in wildlife serves numerous biological purposes, including sexual selection signaling, thermoregulation, and camouflage. However, the physical appearance of wildlife also influences the ways in which humans interact with them. Wildlife conservation has largely revolved around humans’ prop...

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Veröffentlicht in:Human ecology : an interdisciplinary journal 2024-04, Vol.52 (2), p.461-474
Hauptverfasser: Williams, Tyus D., Kreling, Samantha E. S., Stanton, Lauren A., Wilkinson, Christine E., Estien, Cesar O., Schell, Christopher J., Carlen, Elizabeth J.
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container_end_page 474
container_issue 2
container_start_page 461
container_title Human ecology : an interdisciplinary journal
container_volume 52
creator Williams, Tyus D.
Kreling, Samantha E. S.
Stanton, Lauren A.
Wilkinson, Christine E.
Estien, Cesar O.
Schell, Christopher J.
Carlen, Elizabeth J.
description Coloration in wildlife serves numerous biological purposes, including sexual selection signaling, thermoregulation, and camouflage. However, the physical appearance of wildlife also influences the ways in which humans interact with them. Wildlife conservation has largely revolved around humans’ propensity to favor charismatic megafauna, but human perceptions of wildlife species extend beyond conservation measures into our everyday interactions with individual wildlife. Our aesthetic appreciation for different species interplays with culture, lore, and the economic interest they carry. As such, one characteristic that may underpin and interact with social drivers of perception is the coloration of a particular individual. We provide case studies illustrating the dynamism in interactions people have with conspicuously colored wildlife – i.e., individuals that vary from their species-typical coloration. We focus on melanism, leucism, and albinism across four species commonly thought of as pests in the United States: coyotes ( Canis latrans ), eastern gray squirrels ( Sciurus carolinensis ), white-tailed deer ( Odocoileus virginianus) , and black-tailed deer ( O. hemionus ).
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subjects Albinism
Anthropology
Camouflage
Case studies
Coloration
Conservation
Deer
Environmental Management
Geography
Megafauna
Melanism
Odocoileus hemionus
Pests
Sexual selection
Social Sciences
Sociology
Thermoregulation
Wildlife conservation
title Of Rarity and Symbolism: Understanding Human Perceptions of Charismatic Color Morphs
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