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Dietary mineral content influences the expression of melanin-based ornamental coloration
Authors:McGraw  Kevin J
Institution:School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287-4501, USA
Abstract:Many animals develop bold patches of black or brown colorationthat are derived from melanin pigments and serve as sexual orsocial signals. At present, there is much debate among behavioralecologists over whether melanin-based color signals are costlyto produce. Studies that have manipulated crude aspects of nutrition(i.e., total food intake) or health have generally found melanin-basedplumage ornaments to be less responsive to such factors thanother types of extravagant color (e.g., carotenoid or structuralbased). However, a recently advanced hypothesis argues thatlimited minerals in the diet, such as calcium (Ca), zinc (Zn),and iron (Fe), may serve to increase melanin pigment productionand maintain signal honesty. Here, I experimentally tested whethervariation in the calcium content of the diet affects the colorand extent of melanin-based plumage in male zebra finches (Taeniopygiaguttata). Calcium supplementation increased the size, but notdarkness, of the black breast plumage patch in fledgling andadult males; however, sexually selected, carotenoid-based redbeak coloration was not affected by the diet manipulation. Theseresults are the first to support the idea that acquisition ofminerals from the diet is a unique, limiting factor for theexpression of ornamental melanin coloration in animals.
Keywords:calcium  honest signaling  plumage pigmentation  Taeniopygia guttata  zebra finch  
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