Avian Retinal Carotenoid Accumulation: Ecophysiological Constraints and Behavioral Consequences

abstract: The elaborate signals of animals are often costly to produce and maintain, thus communicating reliable information about the quality of an individual to potential mates or competitors. The properties of the sensory systems that receive signals can drive the evolution of these signals and s...

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Other Authors: Toomey, Matthew B (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.9326
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-93262018-06-22T03:01:57Z Avian Retinal Carotenoid Accumulation: Ecophysiological Constraints and Behavioral Consequences abstract: The elaborate signals of animals are often costly to produce and maintain, thus communicating reliable information about the quality of an individual to potential mates or competitors. The properties of the sensory systems that receive signals can drive the evolution of these signals and shape their form and function. However, relatively little is known about the ecological and physiological constraints that may influence the development and maintenance of sensory systems. In the house finch (Carpodacus mexicanus) and many other bird species, carotenoid pigments are used to create colorful sexually selected displays, and their expression is limited by health and dietary access to carotenoids. Carotenoids also accumulate in the avian retina, protecting it from photodamage and tuning color vision. Analogous to plumage carotenoid accumulation, I hypothesized that avian vision is subject to environmental and physiological constraints imposed by the acquisition and allocation of carotenoids. To test this hypothesis, I carried out a series of field and captive studies of the house finch to assess natural variation in and correlates of retinal carotenoid accumulation and to experimentally investigate the effects of dietary carotenoid availability, immune activation, and light exposure on retinal carotenoid accumulation. Moreover, through dietary manipulations of retinal carotenoid accumulation, I tested the impacts of carotenoid accumulation on visually mediated foraging and mate choice behaviors. My results indicate that avian retinal carotenoid accumulation is variable and significantly influenced by dietary carotenoid availability and immune system activity. Behavioral studies suggest that retinal carotenoid accumulation influences visual foraging performance and mediates a trade-off between color discrimination and photoreceptor sensitivity under dim-light conditions. Retinal accumulation did not influence female choice for male carotenoid-based coloration, indicating that a direct link between retinal accumulation and sexual selection for coloration is unlikely. However, retinal carotenoid accumulation in males was positively correlated with their plumage coloration. Thus, carotenoid-mediated visual health and performance or may be part of the information encoded in sexually selected coloration. Dissertation/Thesis Toomey, Matthew B (Author) Mcgraw, Kevin J (Advisor) Deviche, Pierre (Committee member) Smith, Brian (Committee member) Rutowski, Ronald (Committee member) Verrelli, Brian (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Physiology Behavioral Sciences Biochemistry Carotenoids Sexual Selection Visual Ecology eng 248 pages Ph.D. Biology 2011 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.9326 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2011
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Physiology
Behavioral Sciences
Biochemistry
Carotenoids
Sexual Selection
Visual Ecology
spellingShingle Physiology
Behavioral Sciences
Biochemistry
Carotenoids
Sexual Selection
Visual Ecology
Avian Retinal Carotenoid Accumulation: Ecophysiological Constraints and Behavioral Consequences
description abstract: The elaborate signals of animals are often costly to produce and maintain, thus communicating reliable information about the quality of an individual to potential mates or competitors. The properties of the sensory systems that receive signals can drive the evolution of these signals and shape their form and function. However, relatively little is known about the ecological and physiological constraints that may influence the development and maintenance of sensory systems. In the house finch (Carpodacus mexicanus) and many other bird species, carotenoid pigments are used to create colorful sexually selected displays, and their expression is limited by health and dietary access to carotenoids. Carotenoids also accumulate in the avian retina, protecting it from photodamage and tuning color vision. Analogous to plumage carotenoid accumulation, I hypothesized that avian vision is subject to environmental and physiological constraints imposed by the acquisition and allocation of carotenoids. To test this hypothesis, I carried out a series of field and captive studies of the house finch to assess natural variation in and correlates of retinal carotenoid accumulation and to experimentally investigate the effects of dietary carotenoid availability, immune activation, and light exposure on retinal carotenoid accumulation. Moreover, through dietary manipulations of retinal carotenoid accumulation, I tested the impacts of carotenoid accumulation on visually mediated foraging and mate choice behaviors. My results indicate that avian retinal carotenoid accumulation is variable and significantly influenced by dietary carotenoid availability and immune system activity. Behavioral studies suggest that retinal carotenoid accumulation influences visual foraging performance and mediates a trade-off between color discrimination and photoreceptor sensitivity under dim-light conditions. Retinal accumulation did not influence female choice for male carotenoid-based coloration, indicating that a direct link between retinal accumulation and sexual selection for coloration is unlikely. However, retinal carotenoid accumulation in males was positively correlated with their plumage coloration. Thus, carotenoid-mediated visual health and performance or may be part of the information encoded in sexually selected coloration. === Dissertation/Thesis === Ph.D. Biology 2011
author2 Toomey, Matthew B (Author)
author_facet Toomey, Matthew B (Author)
title Avian Retinal Carotenoid Accumulation: Ecophysiological Constraints and Behavioral Consequences
title_short Avian Retinal Carotenoid Accumulation: Ecophysiological Constraints and Behavioral Consequences
title_full Avian Retinal Carotenoid Accumulation: Ecophysiological Constraints and Behavioral Consequences
title_fullStr Avian Retinal Carotenoid Accumulation: Ecophysiological Constraints and Behavioral Consequences
title_full_unstemmed Avian Retinal Carotenoid Accumulation: Ecophysiological Constraints and Behavioral Consequences
title_sort avian retinal carotenoid accumulation: ecophysiological constraints and behavioral consequences
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.9326
_version_ 1718699684165320704