id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_ppaq7q4s3rbilmybfflfjssn6u Mary Caswell Stoddard I see your false colours: how artificial stimuli appear to different animal viewers 2019.0 13 .pdf application/pdf 11792 2035 66 colour on animal behaviour, many researchers use paints, markers and dyes Overall, artificial colours can have dramatic and sometimes unexpected effects on the reflectance properties of feathers, often the effects of colour on animal behaviour, typically using paints, markers and applied 26 different artificial colours to single avian feathers. feathers exhibited a range of natural colour-producing mechanisms—unpigmented white (duck), melanin-based ( pheasant and Digital photographs of control and artificially coloured feathers Artificial colour treatments are either applied to the integument (e.g. feathers, skin, scales, petals) of a live animal or Effects of selected artificial colour treatments presented here for the duck, pheasant and peacock feathers. On the white duck feather, black markers and paints produced a dark, flat reflectance spectrum from 300 to 700 nm. On the white duck feather, orange and yellow treatments changed the reflectance properties in expected ways, producing Modelling the appearance of artificial colour stimuli to different visual systems. ./cache/work_ppaq7q4s3rbilmybfflfjssn6u.pdf ./txt/work_ppaq7q4s3rbilmybfflfjssn6u.txt