Seeing red: behavioral evidence of trichromatic color vision in strepsirrhine primates

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Seeing red: behavioral evidence of trichromatic color vision in strepsirrhine primates. / Leonhardt, Sara; Tung, James ; Camden, J. B. et al.
In: Behavioral Ecology, Vol. 20, No. 1, 2009, p. 1-12.

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

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Leonhardt S, Tung J, Camden JB, Leal M, Drea CM. Seeing red: behavioral evidence of trichromatic color vision in strepsirrhine primates. Behavioral Ecology. 2009;20(1):1-12. doi: 10.1093/beheco/arn106

Bibtex

@article{e770c548adcf48748b8cfd74b6d01e5c,
title = "Seeing red: behavioral evidence of trichromatic color vision in strepsirrhine primates",
abstract = "Among primates, catarrhines (Old World monkeys and apes) and certain platyrrhines (New World monkeys) possess trichromatic color vision, which might confer important evolutionary advantages, particularly during foraging. Recently, a polymorphism has been shown to shift the spectral sensitivity of the X-linked opsin protein in certain strepsirrhines (e.g., Malagasy lemurs); however, its behavioral significance remains unknown. We assign genotypes at the X-linked variant to 45 lemurs, representing 4 species, and test if the genetic capacity for trichromacy impacts foraging performance, particularly under green camouflage conditions in which red detection can be advantageous. We confirm polymorphism at the critical site in sifakas and ruffed lemurs and fail to find this polymorphism in collared lemurs and ring-tailed lemurs. We show that this polymorphism may be linked to “behavioral trichromacy” in heterozygous ruffed lemurs but find no comparable evidence in a single heterozygous sifaka. Despite their putative dichromatic vision, female collared lemurs were surprisingly efficient at retrieving both red and green food items under camouflage conditions. Thus, species-specific feeding ecologies may be as important as trichromacy in influencing foraging behavior. Although the lemur opsin polymorphism produced measurable behavioral effects in at least one species, the ruffed lemur, these effects were modest, consistent with the modest shift in spectral sensitivity. Additionally, the magnitude of these effects varied across individuals of the same genotype, emphasizing the need for combined genetic and behavioral studies of trichromatic vision. We conclude that trichromacy may be only one of several routes toward increased foraging efficiency in visually complex environments. ",
keywords = "Ecosystems Research, dichromacy, trichromacy, opsin gene polymorphism , lemurs , feeding ecology , Biology",
author = "Sara Leonhardt and James Tung and Camden, {J. B.} and M. Leal and Drea, {C. M.}",
year = "2009",
doi = "10.1093/beheco/arn106",
language = "English",
volume = "20",
pages = "1--12",
journal = "Behavioral Ecology",
issn = "1045-2249",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Seeing red

T2 - behavioral evidence of trichromatic color vision in strepsirrhine primates

AU - Leonhardt, Sara

AU - Tung, James

AU - Camden, J. B.

AU - Leal, M.

AU - Drea, C. M.

PY - 2009

Y1 - 2009

N2 - Among primates, catarrhines (Old World monkeys and apes) and certain platyrrhines (New World monkeys) possess trichromatic color vision, which might confer important evolutionary advantages, particularly during foraging. Recently, a polymorphism has been shown to shift the spectral sensitivity of the X-linked opsin protein in certain strepsirrhines (e.g., Malagasy lemurs); however, its behavioral significance remains unknown. We assign genotypes at the X-linked variant to 45 lemurs, representing 4 species, and test if the genetic capacity for trichromacy impacts foraging performance, particularly under green camouflage conditions in which red detection can be advantageous. We confirm polymorphism at the critical site in sifakas and ruffed lemurs and fail to find this polymorphism in collared lemurs and ring-tailed lemurs. We show that this polymorphism may be linked to “behavioral trichromacy” in heterozygous ruffed lemurs but find no comparable evidence in a single heterozygous sifaka. Despite their putative dichromatic vision, female collared lemurs were surprisingly efficient at retrieving both red and green food items under camouflage conditions. Thus, species-specific feeding ecologies may be as important as trichromacy in influencing foraging behavior. Although the lemur opsin polymorphism produced measurable behavioral effects in at least one species, the ruffed lemur, these effects were modest, consistent with the modest shift in spectral sensitivity. Additionally, the magnitude of these effects varied across individuals of the same genotype, emphasizing the need for combined genetic and behavioral studies of trichromatic vision. We conclude that trichromacy may be only one of several routes toward increased foraging efficiency in visually complex environments.

AB - Among primates, catarrhines (Old World monkeys and apes) and certain platyrrhines (New World monkeys) possess trichromatic color vision, which might confer important evolutionary advantages, particularly during foraging. Recently, a polymorphism has been shown to shift the spectral sensitivity of the X-linked opsin protein in certain strepsirrhines (e.g., Malagasy lemurs); however, its behavioral significance remains unknown. We assign genotypes at the X-linked variant to 45 lemurs, representing 4 species, and test if the genetic capacity for trichromacy impacts foraging performance, particularly under green camouflage conditions in which red detection can be advantageous. We confirm polymorphism at the critical site in sifakas and ruffed lemurs and fail to find this polymorphism in collared lemurs and ring-tailed lemurs. We show that this polymorphism may be linked to “behavioral trichromacy” in heterozygous ruffed lemurs but find no comparable evidence in a single heterozygous sifaka. Despite their putative dichromatic vision, female collared lemurs were surprisingly efficient at retrieving both red and green food items under camouflage conditions. Thus, species-specific feeding ecologies may be as important as trichromacy in influencing foraging behavior. Although the lemur opsin polymorphism produced measurable behavioral effects in at least one species, the ruffed lemur, these effects were modest, consistent with the modest shift in spectral sensitivity. Additionally, the magnitude of these effects varied across individuals of the same genotype, emphasizing the need for combined genetic and behavioral studies of trichromatic vision. We conclude that trichromacy may be only one of several routes toward increased foraging efficiency in visually complex environments.

KW - Ecosystems Research

KW - dichromacy

KW - trichromacy

KW - opsin gene polymorphism

KW - lemurs

KW - feeding ecology

KW - Biology

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=58149232351&partnerID=8YFLogxK

UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/b9aaf9bc-0678-328b-bb9d-193b84ba07b3/

U2 - 10.1093/beheco/arn106

DO - 10.1093/beheco/arn106

M3 - Journal articles

VL - 20

SP - 1

EP - 12

JO - Behavioral Ecology

JF - Behavioral Ecology

SN - 1045-2249

IS - 1

ER -

DOI