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1.
The intertidal trochid gastropod Austrocochlea constricta (Lamarck) has a variable pattern of banding, the shell ranging from white with fine black stripes, to completely black. The patterns may be classified into six arbitrarily chosen types. Populations were studied on three shores chosen to represent the range of habitat of the species (from estuarine to open coast localities) to determine the relative importance of environmental factors on shell-banding. The densities and proportions of the population in different stripe-classes were estimated from quadrat samples on the three shores. Analysis of size-frequency distributions indicates recruitment to be continuous. In all months, juveniles were at greater densities at the upper level of the distribution of the species on open coast and estuary-mouth platforms; the estuarine population was uni modal in size-frequency distribution. Growth rates of caged animals were higher on the open coast than in the estuary, and changed in animals transferred between the two localities, but did not differ between animals of different banding pattern. The proportion of the population in each stripe-class was constant on each shore, suggesting large scale selection processes do not cause the observed differences in frequencies of each banding pattern.The concentrations of the major shell pigment, uroporphyrin I, varied between stripe-classes and, within classes, between shores, with a trend for more densely pigmented shells on the open coast, a trend also evident for the proportion of the population in the darker stripe-classes. Caged animals transferred from the open coast to the estuary showed changes in banding pattern which were consistent with the differences in pigmentation of the two populations. Animals transferred from the estuary to the open coast changed pattern at the same frequency as controls from the open coast; a result of severe storms which caused the open coast population to show changes of banding pattern.It is concluded that shell-banding patterns in A. constricta are primarily governed by environmental factors.  相似文献   

2.
In northwest Europe, sheltered rocky shores are dominated by fucoid canopy algae and barnacles are rare, although the latter are extremely abundant on exposed shores. The supply of the intertidal barnacle Semibalanus balanoides (L.) to sheltered, fucoid dominated rocky shores was investigated to determine the importance of larval supply in limiting the abundance of adults in shelter. Larval supply was measured at two spatial scales, at the scale of shore (100s of metres), by comparing larval concentrations at exposed and sheltered sites, and at a smaller spatial scale (m), by examining the role of fucoid canopies in limiting supply to the substratum. Replicate plankton trawls were carried out above the intertidal zone at high water at two sheltered sites and nearby exposed headlands. The concentration of S. balanoides cyprid larvae was significantly higher at the sheltered sites on two out of three sampling occasions with up to 14 times greater larvae on one occasion than the nearby exposed site. The effect of the macroalgal canopy on supply to the substratum was assessed in two ways: directly, by pumping water from the substratum in areas with and without Ascophyllum nodosum (L.) Le Jolis, and indirectly by measuring cyprid settlement in a canopy-manipulation experiment. Pumped plankton samples from mid tide level showed that the A. nodosum canopy did not form a barrier to larval supply and may have had a positive effect on larval concentrations at the substratum. Cyprid settlement was assessed in the mid shore A. nodosum and low shore Fucus serratus L. zones to areas with canopy algae (but protected from the sweeping effects of macroalgal fronds) and without canopy. Settlement over three consecutive 24-h periods showed a consistent pattern; settlement was consistently lower beneath the F. serratus canopy than in cleared areas, suggesting that this algal species forms a barrier, limiting supply of cyprid larvae to the substratum.  相似文献   

3.
The marine snail Littorina saxatilis is highly polymorphic for shell colour. It lives in the heterogeneous intertidal zone, where there are sharp transitions in a number of abiotic factors that may influence the relative fitness of morphs. We investigated the hypothesis of selected variation by relating the colour distribution to five factors (wave exposure, substratum, shore level, sex, snail age), and to interactions between them. We compared patterns from geographical areas in Sweden, Iceland and Russia. Cryptic morphs (tessellated and different dark colours) generally dominated (80–98%) while conspicuous morphs (white, yellow, red and banded) were less common (2–20%). The colour frequencies were often related to wave exposure, substratum and shore level. Frequencies rarely varied with age and never with sex. In order to test the assumption that the different colours are genetically determined we cross-bred snails from Iceland in the laboratory. Both the presence of bands and the ground colours of the shell were inherited, and we have tentative support for a one-locus two-allele model for banding. Our results support a model of selected inherited colour variation, involving a number of different selective agents, the importance of which may vary between populations on local and geographical scales.  相似文献   

4.
The limpet Patella vulgata L. is an important microphagous grazer on intertidal rocky shores of north-west Europe, occurring across the wave exposure gradient. Groups of P. vulgata were selected at mid-tide level of two exposed shores and two sheltered, fucoid dominated shores on the Isle of Man, British Isles, and manipulated to equivalent densities and population structure. The level of grazing activity and growth rate were determined over a 1-year period. At the same time, the abundance of epilithic microalgae, measured as the concentration of chlorophyll a, was determined as an estimate of food supply. Microagal abundance showed a seasonal pattern in both exposed and sheltered conditions, with higher levels in winter compared to summer. In both seasons, the microalgal resource was more abundant on the sheltered shore studied. The level of grazing activity in P. vulgata showed a seasonal pattern on the exposed but not the sheltered shores. Averaged over the year, grazing activity on the exposed shores was over double that on sheltered shores. Thus, in sheltered conditions, food supply for limpets was high and grazing activity low; in exposed conditions, food supply was low and grazing activity high. The growth rate of P. vulgata, measured as increase in shell length, showed no significant difference between exposed and sheltered shores. Growth rate was also determined in P. vulgata at natural densities. Although the overall density declined with decreasing exposure to wave action, the density per unit area of grazeable substance was higher in shelter. In these populations, the mean growth rate was over twice as high on exposed compared to sheltered shores.  相似文献   

5.
Shell polymorphisms are widespread among those intertidal gastropods that lack a pelagic spreading stage. These polymorphisms may indicate diversifying selection in a heterogeneous habitat, but to do this the variation must be at least pardy inherited. Galician populations of Littorina saxatilis (Olivi) living in exposed rocky shores are highly polymorphic in several shell traits, e.g. ornamentation, banding and size. Mature snails of the upper-shore ridged and banded (RB) morph is, for example, often twice as large as mature individuals of the lower-shore smooth and unbanded (SU) morph of the same shore.
We investigated the hypothesis that lower-shore snails grow more slowly and that differences in growth rate were at least partly inherited and could be explained by diversifying selection. We released snails of different origin (upper, mid- and lower shore) and morph (RB, SU and hybrids) at different shore levels and compared their shell increment after one month of growth. We found that despite considerable variation among individuals and among replicate samples (together about 53% of the total variation), average rates of growth differed between morphs. RB snails both from the upper and mid-shores grew at a high rate at all shore levels, SU snails grew considerably less, and hybrids grew at intermediate rates, at all levels. Inherited difference among morphs explained about 34% of the total variation while effects of shore levels and the interaction morph x shore level explained only 5 and 7%, respectively. Thus a large part of the difference in growth rate leading to different adult sizes of the two morphs has probably evolved due to spatially varying selection favouring large sizes in upper-shore and small sizes in lower-shore environments.  相似文献   

6.
Bahia Concepcion is a coastal lagoon that has bottom anoxic conditions and high pigment concentrations during the summer. The phytoplankton responsible for this pigment increase is enigmatic, therefore we sampled the lagoon to analyze the pigment with a C8-HPLC system to look for signatures of phytoplankton groups. Analysis reveals a low pigment concentration in the mixed layer with a higher concentration of zeaxanthin and increasing values of chlorophyll a, peridinin, and fucoxanthin below, which peaked at the depth where oxygen dramatically decreases and H(2)S increases. Below this depth, a high pigmentation was recorded and the most important signatures were six chlorophyll-like pigments that eluted between the fucoxanthin and the chlorophyll a, and one carotenoid that eluted just after the chlorophyll a. Spectral characteristics of these last pigments are very similar to pigments present in the Chlorobiales group. These results suggest that cyanobacteria, diatoms, and dinoflagellates are responsible for the chlorophyll a increases, though in highly pigmented samples, anoxygenic phototrophic bacteria are probably the main contributors to the increase in pigments.  相似文献   

7.
Highly mobile aquatic predators are known to forage in the intertidal during periods of immersion. There is limited quantitative information, however, on the extent to which these predators influence the abundance of grazing molluscs which are known to have a key role in structuring intertidal assemblages. Our preliminary video observations revealed that crabs and small fish were abundant on shores in southwest England during high-tide. We then used manipulative experiments to quantify the effect of small mobile aquatic predators on the abundance of limpets (Patella vulgata L.). On the lower shore at two moderately sheltered rocky shores three treatments were established: complete cage, partial cage (cage control) and uncaged (natural condition). The complete cages excluded all predators. The partial cage treatment allowed full access to small predators and the uncaged treatment allowed access to all predators. After two months, limpet abundance in uncaged and partial cage treatments had declined by around 50% compared to the complete cage treatment. Population structure also changed with survival of larger individuals being greater than smaller individuals in the open and partial cage treatments compared to the complete cage treatment. The effects of excluding predators were consistent at small (meters) and large spatial scales (kilometres) and hence, it would appear that the outcomes of our research are generally applicable to similar shores in the region.To explore the mechanism behind the differential effects of predators according to prey size, we compared the detachment force required to remove limpets of differing sizes from the shore. This was around four times greater for larger individuals than for smaller ones indicating that smaller limpets were more vulnerable to predation. These effects were also consistent between locations. Subsequent laboratory observations showed that the crabs Carcinus maenas (L.), Necora puber (L.) and Cancer pagurus (L.) which are locally abundant predators of limpets, had differing handling behaviour but were all highly efficient at removing limpets from substratum. Hence, shell width and attachment force appeared to be critical factors influencing the vulnerability of limpets to predation by these crabs. Limpets are known to control the abundance of macroalgae on shores in the North-east Atlantic and so our conclusions about the role of mobile predators in regulating the abundance of these grazers are important to our broader understanding of the ecology of these shores.  相似文献   

8.
Photosynthetic pigments and their derivatives were measured in sediments in the fjordic Loch Eil and the Firth of Lome, Scotland, between November 1975 and November 1976. After acetone extraction from the top 10 mm of sediment cores, pigments were crudely separated, by fluorescence change on acidification, into (chlorophyll a + chlorophyllide a) and phaeopigments. The greatest pigment concentrations (mean 73 μg · g sediment dry wt?1) were found in the most reducing sediments which also had a high average proportion (23%) of chlorophyll. The least mean pigment concentration (23 μg · g?1) and proportion of chlorophyll (17%) were found in the most oxidizing sediments in the Firth of Lorne where there was a clear seasonal cycle, with a peak in sediment pigment concentration and chlorophyll proportion in May and June, just after the planktonic spring increase. The Loch Eil stations showed a less clear or no seasonal cycle; the station most affected by organic input was the most variable from month to month. It was concluded that redox status was the most obvious control of sediment pigment content, whereas the effect of sedimentation of phytoplankton was complex.  相似文献   

9.
The abundance of intertidal microalgal food resources was estimated on shores at Cape Banks (Botany Bay, New South Wales) by indirect assays of the concentration of chlorophyll on and in the surface of sandstone rocks. Examination of the relationships between chlorophyll concentration and weight and area of rock samples allowed valid assays to be made despite uncontrollable variations from replicate to replicate in the amount of rock sampled. Microalgal cells were also sampled directly by brushing them from the surface of the rock. The relationship between amount of chlorophyll in samples, and the number of microalgal cells in immediately adjacent brushed areas indicated a relatively constant amount of chlorophyll per cell at different heights and on different parts of the shore throughout different seasons of the year. These preliminaries determined that assays of chlorophyll provided reliable, repeatable estimates of the number of microalgal cells present.Replicated sampling at five heights on a transect spanning the mid-shore regions of a sheltered shore dominated by grazing gastropods, at approximately monthly intervals from 1977 to 1979, revealed a vertical gradient of increasing abundance of microalgae towards the bottom of the shore, except during summer. This trend was not correlated with decreasing abundance of microalgal grazers. During summer, the abundance of microalgae declined abruptly at all levels. The decrease was greatest at the lower levels, resulting in little or no difference among the abundances of microalgae at the five heights during summer. The seasonal changes were again unrelated to any major changes in densities of grazers. These trends confirm the general patterns of distribution of intertidal microalgae in previous studies in other parts of the world. The present data are discussed with respect to problems of interpretation of microalgal food resources for intertidal grazers.  相似文献   

10.
The shape and relative weight of the shell have been shown tovary intraspecifically and interspecifically in a number ofspecies of gastropods, including many different littorinids.These differences give rise to different shell forms in differenthabitats. In those species which have non-planktotrophic development,differences in shell form among shores have been usually explainedin terms of natural selection because exposure to waves supposedlyfavours light shells with large apertures, while predation bycrabs on sheltered shores favours elongated, thick shells withsmaller apertures. Differences in shell shape among speciesfound at different heights on the shore have been explainedin terms of resistance to desiccation and temperature. Suchvariables would tend to act on a relatively broad-scale, i.e.causing differences among heights on a shore or among shores.Rates of growth, which might vary at much smaller scales withina shore, have also been shown to affect the shapes of many shells. In this study, the shape and relative weight of shells of threespecies of co-existing littorinids (Littorina unifasciata, Bembiciumnanum and Nodilittorina pyramidalis) were measured. These speciesall haveplanktotrophic development and they are found on manyshores where there is no evidence that they are preyed uponby crabs. Before explanations of shell shape are proposed, itis necessary that patterns of variation, within different partsof ashore and among different shores are clearly documented.These patterns were measured at a number of different spatialscales within and among replicate shores with different amountsof wave exposure. Large and small specimens were included toallow intraspecific comparisons among snails of different sizesfound at different heights on the shore. The results showedsignificant differences among shores in shape and relative weightof shells, but these differences could not be explained by exposureto waves. In addition, snails of different sizes and differentspecies did not show the same patterns although they were collectedfrom the same sites. Importantly, the shell shape of Liuorinaunifasciata varied significantly among sites at approximatelythe same height within a shore. These differences could notbe clearly correlated with density, mean size nor exposure towaves. The only consistent pattern was a decrease in relativeaperture size in specimens living higher on the shore. Modelsthat have commonly been proposed to explain shape and relativeweight of shells in other species of gastropods are not adequateto explain the small- and large-scale variation of the measurementsdescribed here. It is proposed that any selective advantageof shell morphology and the effects of any variables on thedevelopment of shell morphology in these species can only beidentified after appropriately designed and replicated fieldexperiments. (Received 4 March 1994; accepted 13 September 1994)  相似文献   

11.
Many bird species lay eggs speckled with protoporphyrin‐based spots, however, for most of them the function of eggshell spotting is unknown. A plausible hypothesis is that protoporphyrin might have a structural function in strengthening the eggshell and is therefore deposited when calcium is scarce. In this study, we experimentally provided Great Tit Parus major females with supplemental calcium to examine its effect on the protoporphyrin‐based maculation of their eggs. In addition, we studied variation in eggshell pigmentation patterns in relation to other egg parameters and laying order. Calcium‐supplemented females laid larger eggs but shell thickness was not significantly affected by the treatment. Calcium supplementation may reduce the time and energy females devote to searching for calcium‐rich material, so that they can collect more nutrients and so lay larger eggs. Furthermore, pigment darkness was associated with egg volume and shape, which suggests that female quality and environmental food availability may also influence the shell pigmentation pattern. Within clutches, later‐laid eggs had larger and darker spots that were distributed more unevenly on the shell surface. This within‐clutch pattern could be explained by the increase in egg volume and egg shape and a decline in shell thickness with egg‐laying order, which characteristics were all related to shell‐spotting pattern. Eggs with a coronal ring had thinner shells, but pigment intensity and spot size were not related to shell thickness. Thus, our results suggest that concentrated spotting distribution may have a mechanical function, supporting the structural‐function hypothesis.  相似文献   

12.
13.
The aim of this study was to investigate when adult distribution patterns are established in the barnacles Chthamalus stellatus and C. montagui. Adult ‘zones’ were identified by analysing field counts of both species at mid and upper shore heights. Monthly collections of cyprids, < 1 month old metamorphs and recruits (all metamorphosed individuals older than approximately 1 month) were made for C. stellatus and C. montagui in natural barnacle beds at six shores in SW Ireland. This was carried out over one year in 1996/1997, using a hierarchical sampling design. Abundance of total recruits (0-3 months old) was compared between adult zones after the main settlement season had ended. In addition, scales of variability in 0-3 month recruitment into adult zones were compared between the species at two scales: shores (1000s of metres) and sites within shores (10s of metres). Older recruits of each species, up to 11 months of age, were also compared between adult zones.The majority of settlement (measured as attached cyprids) occurred between August and October 1996. In October, there was no effect of adult zone on the abundance of total (0-3 month) recruitment up to that point in either species. Despite this homogeneity in recruitment between adult zones, significant spatial variation was found in 0-3 month recruits of both species at both of the scales examined. In C. stellatus the amount of variation associated with the larger scale (shore) was more than twice that of sites or of the residual variation (replicates within sites). 0-3 month recruitment in C. montagui was also most variable at the scale of shores but the residual variability (between replicates within site) was of similar magnitude to that of shores. Variability in 0-3 month C. montagui recruitment was relatively low at the scale of sites.There was a small but consistent input of recruits to adult zones over 9 months of the year, complicating the assessment of when adult patterns were set-up in these species. By June 1997, characteristic patterns of adult dominance had been established at all shores. Settlement had completely ceased by this time and individual barnacles were potentially 11 months old. Neither settlement nor early recruitment are significant in determining adult zonation patterns in these species. Instead, differential mortality patterns in individuals up to the age of 11 months are implicated in determining patterns of distribution of both species.  相似文献   

14.
The small honeycomb barnacle Chamaesipho tasmanica occurs in patches at high levels on exposed rocky shores, but often carpets the substratum at mid-shore levels of sheltered shores in south-eastern Australia. Studies of larval supply from 1990 to 1993 and concurrent monitoring of settlement from 1991 to 1993 revealed that larval arrival and settlement were typified by trickles of larvae from late July to December (although some were observed in January and February). Major pulses of arriving cyprids were also recorded once or twice each year. While local patterns of water-flow had no impact on numbers of larvae arriving, major peaks of larval arrival were always associated with strong southerly winds during new and full moons. There was a consistent spatial pattern of larval supply; more larvae were always caught in one area low on the shore. Numbers of larvae caught were, however, very sporadic within a given year and very variable from one year to the next. While the different numbers of cyprids in different places cannot be explained by cyprids arriving first on lower parts of the shore, longer periods of submersion nor aggregations of larvae in the plankton, recurrent patterns of arrival of larvae suggest that local site-specific characteristics have an influence on the demography of populations of this species. Variations in numbers of larvae arriving were responsible for the variations in distributions of juveniles on the substratum.  相似文献   

15.
Littorina rudis (Maton) is a common species on a wide variety of rocky shores. At Newhaven L. rudis is generally abundant on boulders, juveniles being reliant upon empty barnacle shells for shelter. The experimental addition of crevices resulted in greatly increased population densities, suggesting that crevice availability is normally a limiting factor on this shore. A relationship is demonstrated between the size of artificially provided crevices and the mean shell lengths of the populations of L. rudis they support. The relevance of crevice availability and quality, including empty barnacle shells, to the abundance and size distribution of L. rudis and other littorines is discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Early hypotheses to account for the pattern of zonation and vertical distribution of species on rocky shores in Britain invoked the concept of critical tidal levels. These levels were at heights on the shore where the upper or lower boundaries of distribution of a number of species coincided. Critical levels were correlated with heights on the shore where there were changes in the rate of change, with height, of the annual proportion of the time spent emersed. This was calculated from predicted tide tables. One implications of this was that different assemblages of intertidal species were present between particular levels on the shore. Futhermore, this hypothesis depended on patterns of vertical distribution of several species being identically controlled by physical factors associated with the rise and fall of the tide. This conflicts with more recent hypotheses, based upon experimental evidence, which include the effects of biological interactions among species on their patterns of distribution.The methods of calculation of the annual emersion curve were approximate, with a high degree of extrapolation. The hypothesis that critical levels exist has not been quantitatively tested.New, more accurate calculations of the emersion curve, from predicted tidal heights, indicate a smooth, monotonic curve against height on the shore. This eliminates the possibility of correlation between the coincident boundaries of distribution of a group of species and a height at which the curve changes in slope.The upper and lower boundaries of species were recorded in transects on five shores in different parts of Britain. If critical level exist, the upper or lower boundaries of a set of species must depart from random dispersion up and down the shore, to be clumped or aggregated at the critical levels. A test for non-random dispersion of the boundaries indicated no significant departure from random on any of the shores sampled.There is thus no evidence that critical tidal levels exist, because there is no evidence that the upper, or lower, boundaries of vertical distribution of intertidal species are in any way aggregated. There is no possibility of correlation between changes of slope of the emersion curve at particular heights on the shore and the patterns of distribution of intertidal species on British shores. The hypothesis of critical tidal levels must be abandoned and the rôle of the effects of tidal rise and fall on the vertical distribution of intertidal species must be re-examined in any new hypotheses to account for observed patterns of zonation.  相似文献   

17.
18.
The effects of exposure and predation on the shell of two British winkles   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Joseph  Heller 《Journal of Zoology》1976,179(2):201-213
Changes in shell size and shell shape of the two British winkles Littorina nigrolineata and L. rudis were studied in relation to exposure and to crab-size. In both species, shells from exposed shores are smaller and more globose than those from sheltered shores. Also, in rudis of exposed shores the mouth is relatively wider. In shores of equally sheltered conditions, shells are bigger at those localities where crabs are large than at those localities where they are small. The largest shells are found in those localities where it is extremely sheltered, and the crabs are very large.
It is argued that on exposed shores, small shells are favoured because they have more possibilities than large ones to shelter in crevices and in barnacle interspaces, from the impact of winds and waves. A globose shell could accommodate more foot muscle and thus enable a stronger adherence to the rock; and an increased mouth diameter would increase the area of foot adherence to the rock. On sheltered shores, on the other hand, large, narrow-mouthed shells are favoured because they discourage crab predation, large crabs being abundant mainly on sheltered shores.
The possible significance of shell size and shape in relation to zonation is discussed, in view of the different predatory and physical conditions which prevail in different zones of the shore, and the different shell specializations which these conditions would require.  相似文献   

19.
Duration of emergence increases with tidal height on rocky shores therefore, emergence adaptations in intertidal species such as littorine and other prosobranch gastropods have been considered correlated with zonation patterns; temperature tolerance, desiccation resistance and aerial respiration rate all commonly assumed to increase progressively with increasing zonation level. Such direct correlations are rarely observed in nature. Maximal aerial gas exchange occurs in mid-shore, not high shore species. Temperature tolerance and desiccation resistance do not increase directly with shore height. Thus, hypotheses regarding physiological correlates of zonation require revaluation. A new hypothesis is presented that the high tide mark presents a single major physiological barrier on rocky shores. Above it, snails experience prolonged emergence and extensive desiccation; below it, predictable submergence and rehydration with each tidal cycle. Thus, desiccation stress is minimal below the high tide mark and maximal above it. Therefore, species restricted below high tide (the eulittoral zone) should display markedly different adaptive strategies to emergence than those above it (the eulittoral fringe). A review of the literature indicated that adaptations in eulittoral species are dominated by those allowing maintenance of activity and foraging in air including: evaporative cooling; low thermal tolerance; elevated aerial O2 uptake rates; and high capacity for radiant heat absorption. Such adaptations exacerbate evaporative water loss. In contrast, species restricted to the eulittoral fringe display adaptive strategies that minimize desiccation and prolong survival of emergence including: foot withdrawal, preventing heat conduction from the substratum; aestivation in air; elevated thermal tolerance reducing necessity for evaporative cooling; position maintenance by cementation to the substratum and increased capacity for heat dissipation. In order to test of this hypothesis the upper thermal limits, tissue and substratum temperatures on emergence in direct sunlight and evaporative water loss and tissue temperatures on emergence in 40 °C were evaluated for specimens of six species of eulittoral and eulittoral fringe gastropods from a granite shore on Princess Royal Harbour near Albany, Western Australia. The results were consistant with adaptation to the proposed desiccation barrier at high tide. The eulittoral species, Austrocochlea constricta, Austrocochlea concamerata, Nerita atramentosa and Lepsiella vinosa, displayed adaptations dominated by maintenance of activity and foraging during emergence while the eulittoral fringe littorine species, Bembicium vittatum and Nodilittorina unifasciata displayed adaptations dominated by minization of activity and evaporative water loss during emergence. The evolution of adaptations allowing tolerance of prolonged desiccation have allowed littorine species to dominate high intertidal rocky shore gastropod faunas throughout the world's oceans.  相似文献   

20.
The striking variation in colour and maculation of bird eggs has fascinated biologists since centuries, and many hypotheses based on mechanical, physiological or signalling functions have been proposed for its evolution by natural and sexual selection. Protoporphyrin is the main eggshell pigment found in brown maculated eggs, and is assumed to function as a mediator of these selection processes. It is a precursor of heme with pro‐oxidant properties, and hence a link between brown maculation and female condition has been proposed and tested in a number of studies, albeit with contrasting results. A variety of different visual methods have been used to quantify outer eggshell pigmentation, which has been assumed to correspond to overall quantity of protoporphyrin in the shell. Yet, this relationship has rarely been tested. The aim of this study was to apply four commonly used methods to assess pigmentation in great tit eggs with protoporphyrin as the predominant eggshell pigment, and to compare the results of these methods. Specifically, we 1) ranked eggshell pigmentation by human naked eye, 2) applied a granularity approach and 3) measured spectrophotometric reflectance of eggshell pigments. Second, we estimated the relationship between outer eggshell pigmentation (i.e. estimated by three different methods above) and true protoporphyrin concentration deposited in the entire shell measured by HPLC. Among‐method estimates were significantly correlated for the traits describing pigment ‘darkness’ only. While the model including scores based on human naked eyes explained 16% of the variance of pigment concentration in the entire shell, spectrometry explained 27%, and the granularity approach explained 40%. Thus, the estimation of true pigment concentration in the entire shell from the visible outer side of the shell is most reliable with the granularity approach. It is relevant for studies where the maintenance of the integrity of the eggs is essential.  相似文献   

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