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Prior to publication the study of animal coloration was plagued by
fanciful speculations, post hoc explanations and untestable
hypotheses. This title, originally published in 1979, draws
together widely scattered research into the coloration of animals;
formulates predictive hypotheses to account for color; documents
the accuracy of many of these hypotheses; and suggests directions
for future research. The book grew out of a symposium, The
Behavioral Significance of Color at the 1977 meeting of the Animal
Behavior Society, and presents evidence concerning patterns of
coloration and their influence on animal behaviour and interaction
Physical principles of radiation are discussed in Chapter 1,
followed, in subsequent chapters, by an examination of the
physiological functions of animal coloration (e.g.
thermoregulation, hydroregulation, abrasion-resistance,
extraretinal photoreception). Treatment of coloration that affects
the animal's visibility to other animals opens with a masterful
overview of theories of color vision and its occurrence throughout
the animal kingdom. Chapter 6 explores the role of color vision and
fruit color in the selection of food by wild primates with comments
on the coevolution of fruiting trees and their primate customers.
Dr Jack P. Hailman addresses the elusive concept of
conspicuousness. He summarizes a strategy for calculating
conspicuous coloration based on measurements in natural habitats.
Experiments, naturalistic observations and anecdotes of optical
communication are exceedingly numerous. Chapters 8 and 9 review
these data and suggest general principles of inter- and
intraspecific optical communication. Each chapter is enhanced by
the critical evaluations of Drs. C. Richard Tracy and W. J.
Hamilton III. In closing, the editor discusses coloration as it
affects an animal's own vision (e.g., black eyelines to reduce
glare). Most significantly the book emphasizes the need for a
balanced, scientifically rigorous approach to the question of
evolution of animal coloration. It is an important source for
anyone contemplating or currently involved in research in this
field of investigation.
Prior to publication the study of animal coloration was plagued by
fanciful speculations, post hoc explanations and untestable
hypotheses. This title, originally published in 1979, draws
together widely scattered research into the coloration of animals;
formulates predictive hypotheses to account for color; documents
the accuracy of many of these hypotheses; and suggests directions
for future research. The book grew out of a symposium, The
Behavioral Significance of Color at the 1977 meeting of the Animal
Behavior Society, and presents evidence concerning patterns of
coloration and their influence on animal behaviour and interaction
Physical principles of radiation are discussed in Chapter 1,
followed, in subsequent chapters, by an examination of the
physiological functions of animal coloration (e.g.
thermoregulation, hydroregulation, abrasion-resistance,
extraretinal photoreception). Treatment of coloration that affects
the animal's visibility to other animals opens with a masterful
overview of theories of color vision and its occurrence throughout
the animal kingdom. Chapter 6 explores the role of color vision and
fruit color in the selection of food by wild primates with comments
on the coevolution of fruiting trees and their primate customers.
Dr Jack P. Hailman addresses the elusive concept of
conspicuousness. He summarizes a strategy for calculating
conspicuous coloration based on measurements in natural habitats.
Experiments, naturalistic observations and anecdotes of optical
communication are exceedingly numerous. Chapters 8 and 9 review
these data and suggest general principles of inter- and
intraspecific optical communication. Each chapter is enhanced by
the critical evaluations of Drs. C. Richard Tracy and W. J.
Hamilton III. In closing, the editor discusses coloration as it
affects an animal's own vision (e.g., black eyelines to reduce
glare). Most significantly the book emphasizes the need for a
balanced, scientifically rigorous approach to the question of
evolution of animal coloration. It is an important source for
anyone contemplating or currently involved in research in this
field of investigation.
Audubon was not the father of American ornithology. That honorific
belongs to Alexander Wilson, whose encyclopedic American
Ornithology established a distinctive approach that emphasized the
observation of live birds. In the first full-length study to
reproduce all of Wilson's unpublished drawings for the nine-volume
Ornithology, Edward Burtt and William Davis illustrate Wilson's
pioneering and, today, underappreciated achievement as the first
ornithologist to describe the birds of the North American
wilderness. Abandoning early ambitions to become a poet in the mold
of his countryman Robert Burns, Wilson emigrated from Scotland to
settle near Philadelphia, where the botanist William Bartram
encouraged his proclivity for art and natural history. Wilson
traveled 12,000 miles on foot, on horseback, in a rowboat, and by
stage and ship, establishing a network of observers along the way.
He wrote hundreds of accounts of indigenous birds, discovered many
new species, and sketched the behavior and ecology of each species
he encountered. Drawing on their expertise in both science and art,
Burtt and Davis show how Wilson defied eighteenth-century
conventions of biological illustration by striving for realistic
depiction of birds in their native habitats. He drew them in poses
meant to facilitate identification, making his work the model for
modern field guides and an inspiration for Audubon, Spencer
Fullerton Baird, and other naturalists who followed. On the
bicentennial of his death, this beautifully illustrated volume is a
fitting tribute to Alexander Wilson and his unique contributions to
ornithology, ecology, and the study of animal behavior.
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