Why birds eat colourful grit: colour preferences revealed by the colour of gizzard stones

Colour preferences from sexual or social contexts are assumed to have arisen owing to preferences for specific kinds of food, representing a sensory bias, but once colour preferences have evolved in a sexual context, they may also be expressed during foraging. We tested whether preferences for speci...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of evolutionary biology 2010-03, Vol.23 (3), p.509-517
Hauptverfasser: MOeLLER, AP, ERRITZOeE, J
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description Colour preferences from sexual or social contexts are assumed to have arisen owing to preferences for specific kinds of food, representing a sensory bias, but once colour preferences have evolved in a sexual context, they may also be expressed during foraging. We tested whether preferences for specific body colours (i.e. plumage and soft parts) were related to colour preferences for grit ingested by birds. Birds eat grit to facilitate break down of food by the gizzard, and this function is independent of the colour of grit, but depends on the physical properties of stones. Bird species were significantly consistent in colour of grit, and grit of different colours varied in prevalence among species, even when analyses were restricted to a sample from a single locality. There were positive correlations between presence of lilac and red grit in the gizzard and presence of sexually dichromatic lilac and red colour on the body. There was a positive correlation between red grit colour and red sexually monochromatic body colour. Bird species with many different sexual colours, but not sexually monochromatic colours on their body had many different colours of grit. Males had more lilac and red grit than females, with this effect differing among species, whereas that was not the case for grit of other colours. These findings are consistent with the sensory bias hypothesis that birds express preferences for grit of specific colours and a high diversity of colours related to sexual colouration of the body, even when the colour of such grit is only visible to the individual at the moment of ingestion.
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Males had more lilac and red grit than females, with this effect differing among species, whereas that was not the case for grit of other colours. 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source MEDLINE; Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current); EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Animal behavior
Animals
Aves
Biological Evolution
Birds
Color
colour preferences
Evolutionary biology
Female
Food
Food Preferences
Gizzard
grit
Male
Mating Preference, Animal
Pigmentation
Plumage
Selection, Genetic
sensory bias
Sex Characteristics
sexual selection
Species Specificity
title Why birds eat colourful grit: colour preferences revealed by the colour of gizzard stones
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