SUMMARY
The feathers of Amazon parrots are brightly coloured. They contain a unique class of pigments, the psittacofulvins, deposited in both barbs and barbules, causing yellow or red coloured feathers. In specific feather areas, spongy nanostructured barb cells exist, reflecting either in the blue or blue-green wavelength range. The blue-green spongy structures are partly enveloped by a blue-absorbing, yellow-colouring pigment acting as a spectral filter, thus yielding a green coloured barb. Applying reflection and transmission spectroscopy, we characterized the Amazons' pigments and spongy structures, and investigated how they contribute to the feather coloration. The reflectance spectra of Amazon feathers are presumably tuned to the sensitivity spectra of the visual photoreceptors.
FOOTNOTES
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↵* Deceased
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AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS
D.G.S. and J.T. designed the study. All authors performed experiments and analysed data. D.G.S. wrote the manuscript.
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Supplementary material available online at http://jeb.biologists.org/cgi/content/full/216/23/4358/DC1
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COMPETING INTERESTS
No competing interests declared.
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FUNDING
This study was financially supported by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research/European Office of Aerospace Research and Development (AFOSR/EOARD grant FA8655-08-1-3012).
- © 2013. Published by The Company of Biologists Ltd