Sangam: A Confluence of Knowledge Streams

Camouflage in heterogeneous intertidal habitats: background choice, colour change, and polyphenic crypsis in the chameleon prawn (Hippolyte varians).

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dc.contributor Stevens, Martin
dc.contributor Wilson, Alastair
dc.creator Green, S
dc.date 2022-11-30T18:23:44Z
dc.date 2022-12-05
dc.date 2022-11-30T13:07:58Z
dc.date 2022-11-30T18:23:44Z
dc.date.accessioned 2023-02-23T12:18:31Z
dc.date.available 2023-02-23T12:18:31Z
dc.identifier http://hdl.handle.net/10871/131914
dc.identifier.uri http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/CUHPOERS/258725
dc.description A core concept of camouflage is that strong phenotype–environment associations are essential, i.e., a relationship between animal coloration and elements of the visual environment. However, the visual composition of natural habitats is highly variable, both in time and space. To overcome the challenge of maintaining camouflage across multiple backgrounds, animals utilising camouflage are thought to have evolved a variety of strategies, for example, polyphenic coloration, colour change, and behaviours integrating colour patterns with the environment. Studies investigating these flexible camouflage traits, particularly in species displaying multiple colour forms, can facilitate a better understanding of the drivers and trade-offs of camouflage strategies. Camouflage traits are often investigated in isolation but are likely closely associated in an animal’s overall cryptic stratagem. In this thesis I explored the camouflage strategies used by highly variable chameleon prawns (Hippolyte varians; primarily the green and red colour forms) within heterogeneous intertidal habitats. Digital photography and image analysis were used to quantify colour patterns to models of predator (fish) vision to gain an ecologically valid assessment of camouflage. My findings demonstrate that polyphenic coloration can enable seaweed-specialist camouflage, and that longer-duration colour change can improve camouflage against mismatching substrates. I also show that prawns display strong behavioural preferences that actively maintain camouflage; the importance of vision for these decisions has also been explored. Furthermore, I demonstrate that chameleon prawns can adjust behavioural preferences in tandem with colour change. My investigation of the daily colour change rhythm of chameleon prawns establishes that these shifts are driven primarily by environmental light cues; the potential adaptive benefits are also discussed. I explored how the transparent-type colour patterns of prawns may allow for a more generalist camouflage strategy and found that these prawns have no distinct behavioural seaweed preference but are also able to change colour, the colour changes being influenced by uniform and mixed seaweed backgrounds. Overall, in this thesis I demonstrate how plastic camouflage traits, acting individually or in unison, can facilitate camouflage in the face of both rhythmic and stochastic, spatial and temporal, heterogeneity within the visual environment.
dc.language en
dc.publisher University of Exeter
dc.publisher Centre for Ecology and Conservation
dc.rights 2024-06-05
dc.rights This thesis is embargoed until 05/Jun/2024 as the author wishes to allow for publication of the contents.
dc.rights http://www.rioxx.net/licenses/all-rights-reserved
dc.subject Animal Camouflage
dc.subject Colour Change
dc.subject Polyphenic Coloration
dc.subject Behavioural Background Matching
dc.subject Animal coloration
dc.subject Sensory Ecology
dc.subject Behavioural Ecology
dc.title Camouflage in heterogeneous intertidal habitats: background choice, colour change, and polyphenic crypsis in the chameleon prawn (Hippolyte varians).
dc.type Thesis or dissertation
dc.type Doctor of Philosophy in Biological Sciences
dc.type Doctoral
dc.type Doctoral Thesis


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