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Why background colour matters to bees and flowers

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 05:05 authored by Zoe Bukovac, Mani Shrestha, Jair Eduardo Garcia Mendoza, Martin Burd, Alan Dorin, Adrian Dyer
Flowers are often viewed by bee pollinators against a variety of different backgrounds. On the Australian continent, backgrounds are very diverse and include surface examples of all major geological stages of the Earth's history, which have been present during the entire evolutionary period of Angiosperms. Flower signals in Australia are also representative of typical worldwide evolutionary spectral adaptations that enable successful pollination. We measured the spectral properties of 581 natural surfaces, including rocks, sand, green leaves, and dry plant materials, sampled from tropical Cairns through to the southern tip of mainland Australia. We modelled in a hexagon colour space, how interactions between background spectra and flower-like colour stimuli affect reliable discrimination and detection in bee pollinators. We calculated the extent to which a given locus would be conflated with the loci of a different flower-colour stimulus using empirically determined colour discrimination regions for bee vision. Our results reveal that whilst colour signals are robust in homogeneous background viewing conditions, there could be significant pressure on plant flowers to evolve saliently-different colours to overcome background spectral noise. We thus show that perceptual noise has a large influence on how colour information can be used in natural conditions.

Funding

Colour visual processing by honeybees: solutions for decision making in complex environments

Australian Research Council

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Pollination in a new climate: evolutionary simulation of bee and flower interactions for predicting impacts of climate change on pollination

Australian Research Council

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A World Without Bees: simulating important agricultural insect pollinators

Australian Research Council

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History

Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1007/s00359-017-1175-7
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 03407594

Journal

Journal of Comparative Physiology A: Neuroethology, Sensory, Neural, and Behavioral Physiology

Volume

203

Issue

5

Start page

369

End page

380

Total pages

12

Publisher

Springer

Place published

Germany

Language

English

Copyright

© Springer-Verlag 2017

Former Identifier

2006077180

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2017-09-05

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