Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The zoologist Hugh Cott had the final word in Adaptive Coloration in Animals (1940), a definitive synthesis of everything known about camouflage and mimicry in nature. Cott ruffled fewer feathers [than Trofim Lysenko or Vladimir Nabokov ], and his well-organized and unfanatic ideas proved militarily effective, even under the scrutiny of ...
Cephalopod molluscs such as this cuttlefish can change color rapidly for signaling or to match their backgrounds. Active camouflage or adaptive camouflage is camouflage that adapts, often rapidly, to the surroundings of an object such as an animal or military vehicle. In theory, active camouflage could provide perfect concealment from visual ...
Warning coloration of the "Brazilian Skunk" in The Colours of Animals [P 5] The basic concept of warning coloration (aposematism, like the black and yellow pattern of a wasp) is approached very simply: When an animal possesses an unpleasant attribute, it is often to its advantage to advertise the fact as publicly as possible.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Donate
Thayer's 1902 patent application. He failed to convince the US Navy. The English zoologist Edward Bagnall Poulton, author of The Colours of Animals (1890) discovered the countershading of various insects, including the pupa or chrysalis of the purple emperor butterfly, Apatura iris, [2] the caterpillar larvae of the brimstone moth, Opisthograptis luteolata [a] and of the peppered moth, Biston ...
Animals use colour to advertise services such as cleaning to animals of other species; to signal their sexual status to other members of the same species; and in mimicry, taking advantage of the warning coloration of another species. Some animals use flashes of colour to divert attacks by startling predators. Zebras may possibly use motion ...
In his textbook Adaptive Coloration in Animals (1940), Hugh Bamford Cott describes self-decoration under the heading "adventitious concealing coloration", also naming it "adventitious resemblance". He describes it as a device "perhaps unrivalled" for effective concealment, and points out that it is brought about and depends on "highly ...
Hugh Cott, author of the 1940 Adaptive Coloration in Animals, [6] followed by many other researchers, conflated distractive markings with disruptive coloration. [2] [3] Both mechanisms require conspicuous marks. However, the two mechanisms are different, and according to Dimitrova require different kinds of marking.