PROTECTIVE COLORATION

coloration or color pattern of an animal that affords it protection from observation either by its predators or by its prey. The most widespread form of protective coloration is called cryptic resemblance, in which various effects that supplement the similarity of color between the animal and its surroundings enable the creature to blend into the background of its habitat. Disruptive coloration, or irregular patches of contrasting colors, serve to distract the observer's eye from the outline of the animal. Thus the stripes of the tiger and the zebra make detection among the jungle grasses more difficult, whereas the leopard's spots are more suited to the mottled light and shade of the low branches from which it drops onto its prey. Many other creatures (e.g., frogs, lizards, and snakes) are dappled, barred, speckled, mottled, or otherwise distinctively marked or colored so that they blend with sand, water, snow, or specific vegetation, depending on their natural habitat. The pigmentation of some animals (e.g., the chameleon and the flounder) changes to resemble different backgrounds. In countershading, the upper surface of the animal is darker than the undersurface and produces the illusion of flatness. Countershading also aids many fish and birds by blending them with the sky or with the upper water surface when viewed from below and with the land or the sea bottom when viewed from above. Some animals undergo a seasonal variation in color: The stoat and the caribou turn from brown in summer to white in winter (when the stoat is known as ermine). A second type of protective coloration, in animals whose coloration or markings distinctly contrast with their habitat, serves as a warning device either to its predators (e.g., the skunk's stripe and the brilliant colors of many venomous snakes and distasteful insects) or to other members of their species in the vicinity (as the white tail patches of the pronghorn and the jack rabbit that are flashed on approaching danger). The adaptation of an organism's appearance to resemble that of another organism that is repugnant or dangerous to a potential predator is called mimicry. Coloration may thus be categorized as concealing, revealing, or deceiving. Although these devices are not invariably successful, they do increase the statistical chance for survival of the species. The most widely accepted explanation of the phenomenon of protective coloration is Darwin's theory of natural selection.

See R. A. Carr, Protective Coloration and Mimicry (1972); M. Edmunds, Defence in Animals (1974).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Protective Coloration
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books on: Protective Coloration  - 543 results

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...these animals the protective-coloration theory...Thayer and the protective-coloration extremists...substitution for protective coloration, must have been...totally different colorations and color patterns...
...by some much-frequented pool. We have already discussed the alleged "protective coloration" of big game. As regards the game of the open plains protective coloration plays practically no part; and as regards the zebra it plays absolutely...
7. Coloration and Mimicry A peculiar position...colours of animals. These are often protective in nature. Protective resemblance of a species to its...Wallace frequently commented on protective coloration and colour-changes...
...and all of the dinosaurs. Protective Coloration The discussion of adaptation...some of which -- among them, protective coloration -- are extremely...but the animal may enhance the protective value of its coloration by its...
...instance in point, and this coloration is not at all confined to...perhaps not so clear, but the protective coloration of the female must...infantile colors are of superior protective value to those of the adult...and adult may each have a protective coloration suited to the immediate...
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journal articles on: Protective Coloration  - 60 results

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...casual, unconcerned - was protective coloration." The sentence is from an...part to Dickinsons "protective coloration" for her skepticism, which...Barthelmes and their "protective coloration." Hes reviewing Tracy Daughertys...
...for a ride. They had believed a series of things that werent true. On top of it, they lost all the protective coloration, all the protective structuring of the Cold War which had created an enormous magnetic field around America. We had our...
...express his radical Christian thoughts against white injustice under the veil of "religious meetings that provided protective coloration for unapproved talk."53 While Vesey did manage to utilize his position as a church leader to spread potentially...
...Democracy Wall, cleaned up "spiritual pollution," and opposed liberalization, the liberals adjusted their protective coloration. During the 1989 Democracy Movement, when the people demonstrated their intense antiautocratic feeling, some...
...opposed the Communist line in 1941 did not impress William F. Buckley, Jr., who thought it "may have been protective coloration." See W. BUGKLEY, JR., L. BOZELL, MCCARTHY AND HIS ENEMIES 122 ( 1954 ). These writers, generally supportive...
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magazine articles on: Protective Coloration  - 59 results

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...snakes, because all it takes is one bite and youre dead. Youre out of the gene pool." The researchers predicted that the protective effect of looking like a coral snake would break down in those areas where poisonous coral snakes were absent. Under such...
...in danger in the genera population were kept in protective custody. All the slum units were full of low...the middle-class LSD-dealer, began adopting protective coloration, learning to mimic skillfully the stride of the...
...that anyone who sought intimacy with the man was put off by his curiously detached mien and his gift for shifting protective coloration. One former Hollywood girlfriend reported, "Ialways had the feeling that I was with him, but he wasnt with...
...taken upon itself an odor of sanctity (the "you couldnt possibly understand" syndrome). It was a kind of protective coloration. Fortunately, the rationale for this attitude weakened as the effects of long-term design advocacy from corporate...
...effective infrastructure for the perpetration of great evil. Levine finds my claim that fanatics exploit the protective coloration provided by their coreligionists good deeds "overly harsh," but that puzzles me, since he goes on to say that...
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newspaper articles on: Protective Coloration  - 9 results

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...Writer looks past urban camouflage by Ann Geracimos Television writer-producer David Mills knows firsthand about protective coloration. Growing up in what he calls "a lower working-class family," he has told how, during the 1968 riots, neighbors...
...already well annealed in the cut-and-thrust of the pop industry. Though he adopted a "mockney" accent as protective coloration for his early activity, shooting promos for rave bands under contract to Island Records, thus thoroughly honing...
...already well annealed in the cut-and-thrust of the pop industry. Though he adopted a "mockney" accent as protective coloration for his early activity, shooting promos for rave bands under contract to Island Records, thus thoroughly honing...
...experimentation with camouflage and protective coloration in animals are given equal treatment...his daughter Mary as a sort of protective icon watching over her younger...his theories of "protective coloration" and concealment in the wild...
...enfranchise career felons and increase their most loyal voter base. These same liberal Democrats do need a certain protective coloration to protect themselves from the wrath of the voters. They often resort to symbolism that citizens can see, but...
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encyclopedia articles on: Protective Coloration  - 11 results

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PROTECTIVE COLORATION coloration or color pattern of an animal...prey. The most widespread form of protective coloration is called cryptic resemblance...known as ermine). A second type of protective coloration, in animals whose coloration...
COLORATION, PROTECTIVE see protective coloration . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...that fit them for perching, for wading, or for paddling through the water. Adaptive coloration is observed in many animals (see protective coloration ). Among communal insects, such as ants and honeybees, the individuals are highly adapted...
...and Young Woman (Metropolitan Mus.). He also worked in portraiture. With his son Gerald Thayer, he wrote Protective Coloration of the Animal Kingdom (1909), which was used in camouflaging in World War I. See study by N. C. White...
...snakes usually shed their skins several times a year. Mammals change from heavy winter to light summer pelage. Protective coloration is exhibited in the color changes of such mammals as the ermine and the varying hare and, more dramatically...
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