The giant panda is cryptic

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作者
Ossi Nokelainen
Nicholas E. Scott-Samuel
Yonggang Nie
Fuwen Wei
Tim Caro
机构
[1] University of Jyväskylä,Department of Biological and Environmental Science
[2] University of Bristol,School of Psychological Science
[3] Chinese Academy of Sciences,Key Laboratory of Animal Ecology and Conservation Biology
[4] Chinese Academy of Sciences,Center for Excellence in Animal Evolution and Genetics
[5] University of Bristol,School of Biological Sciences
[6] University of California,Center for Population Biology
来源
Scientific Reports | / 11卷
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摘要
The giant panda (Ailuropoda melanoleuca) is an iconic mammal, but the function of its black-and-white coloration is mysterious. Using photographs of giant pandas taken in the wild and state-of-the-art image analysis, we confirm the counterintuitive hypothesis that their coloration provides camouflage in their natural environment. The black fur blends into dark shades and tree trunks, whereas white fur matches foliage and snow when present, and intermediate pelage tones match rocks and ground. At longer viewing distances giant pandas show high edge disruption that breaks up their outline, and up close they rely more on background matching. The results are consistent across acuity-corrected canine, feline, and human vision models. We also show quantitatively that the species animal-to-background colour matching falls within the range of other species that are widely recognised as cryptic. Thus, their coloration is an adaptation to provide background matching in the visual environment in which they live and simultaneously to afford distance-dependent disruptive coloration, the latter of which constitutes the first computational evidence of this form of protective coloration in mammals.
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