Many animals have camouflage appearances that correspond to the habitat where they live, termed phenotype-environment matching. However, this has generally been tested in only a limited number of systems and natural settings, and often not to the relevant vision of key receivers (predators) across different spatial scales. Here, we measured the plumage attributes and putative camouflage used by ground-nesting bird species specialist to particular biomes, specifically tropical rainforest, taiga forest, dry forest, grassland, desert, and tundra from museum specimens. Digital photography and image analysis were used to quantify colour patterns to models of predator vision to understand how different colour patterns may correspond with biome type. With this information, we next created bird models that were photographed in situ in the Valdivian temperate rainforest and Patagonian grassland biomes of Chile to quantify the extent to which plumage coloration and pattern traits provide effective camouflage at different spatial scales. In general, we find that specialist ground-nesting birds express a phenotype that better matches the substrate composition and vegetation structure across large spatial scales of their own biome. This study reveals how animal camouflage works across biomes, relative to the visual system of raptor predators, and at the appropriate distance at which detection may occur.
Medel, J., Lin, S., Briolat, E., Young, A., Stevens, M.
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