Authors
Nathan Katlein, Miranda Ray, Anna Wilkinson, Julien Claude, Maria Kiskowski, Bin Wang, Scott Glaberman, Ylenia Chiari
Publication date
2021/2/3
Journal
bioRxiv
Pages
2021.02. 03.429594
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Description
Animals are exposed to different visual stimuli that influence how they perceive and interact with their environment. Visual information such as shape and colour can help the animal detect, discriminate and make appropriate behavioural decisions for mate selection, communication, camouflage, and foraging. In all major vertebrate groups, it has been shown that certain species can discriminate and prefer certain colours and that colours may increase the response to a stimulus. However, because colour is often studied together with other potentially confounding factors, it is still unclear to what extent colour discrimination plays a crucial role in the perception of and attention towards biologically relevant and irrelevant stimuli. To address these questions in reptiles, we assessed the response of three gecko species Correlophus ciliatus, Eublepharis macularius, and Phelsuma laticauda to familiar and novel 2D images in colour or grayscale. We found that while all species responded more often to the novel than to the familiar images, colour information did not influence object discrimination. We also found that the duration of interaction with images was significantly longer for the diurnal species, P. laticauda, than for the two nocturnal species, but this was independent from colouration. Finally, no differences among sexes were observed within or across species. Our results indicate that geckos discriminate between 2D images of different content independent of colouration, suggesting that colouration does not increase detectability or intensity of the response. These results are essential for uncovering which visual stimuli produce a response in …
Scholar articles
N Katlein, M Ray, A Wilkinson, J Claude, M Kiskowski… - bioRxiv, 2021