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201627Jan21:05

Zebra stripes are not for cam­ou­flage, new study finds

Infor­ma­tion
pub­lished 27 Jan­u­ary 2016 | mod­i­fied 27 Jan­u­ary 2016
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Zebra stripe monitorIf you’ve always thought of a zebra’s stripes as offer­ing some type of cam­ou­flag­ing pro­tec­tion against preda­tors, it’s time to think again, sug­gest sci­en­tists at the Uni­ver­sity of Cal­gary and Uni­ver­sity of Cal­i­for­nia (UC) Davis.

The most long­stand­ing hypoth­e­sis for zebra strip­ing is cryp­sis, or cam­ou­flag­ing, but until now the ques­tion has always been framed through human eyes,” said the study’s lead author, Amanda Melin, an assis­tant pro­fes­sor of bio­log­i­cal anthro­pol­ogy at the Uni­ver­sity of Cal­gary, Canada.

We, instead, car­ried out a series of cal­cu­la­tions through which we were able to esti­mate the dis­tances at which lions and spot­ted hye­nas, as well as zebras, can see zebra stripes under day­light, twi­light, or dur­ing a moon­less night.”

Melin con­ducted the study with Tim Caro, a UC Davis pro­fes­sor of wildlife biol­ogy. In ear­lier stud­ies, Caro and other col­leagues have pro­vided evi­dence sug­gest­ing that the zebra’s stripes pro­vide an evo­lu­tion­ary advan­tage by dis­cour­ag­ing bit­ing flies, which are nat­ural pests of zebras.

The results from this new study pro­vide no sup­port at all for the idea that the zebra’s stripes pro­vide some type of anti-​predator cam­ou­flag­ing effect
Tim Caro, co-​author, Depart­ment of Wildlife, Fish and Con­ser­va­tion Biol­ogy, UC Davis, USA »

In the new study, Melin, Caro and col­leagues Don­ald Kline and Chi­hiro Hira­matsu found that stripes can­not be involved in allow­ing the zebras to blend in with the back­ground of their envi­ron­ment or in break­ing up the out­line of the zebra, because at the point at which preda­tors can see zebras stripes, they prob­a­bly already have heard or smelled their zebra prey. There­fore, the researchers reject this long-​standing hypoth­e­sis of zebra stripes being anti-​predator cam­ou­flage that was debated by Charles Dar­win and Alfred Rus­sell Wal­lace. The find­ings from their study are pub­lished on 22 Jan­u­ary in the jour­nal PLOS ONE.

New find­ings
To test the hypoth­e­sis that stripes cam­ou­flage the zebras against the back­drop of their nat­ural envi­ron­ment, the researchers passed dig­i­tal images taken in the field in Tan­za­nia through spa­tial and colour fil­ters that sim­u­lated how the zebras would appear to their main preda­tors — lions and spot­ted hye­nas — as well as to other zebras.

They also mea­sured the stripes’ widths and light con­trast, or lumi­nance, in order to esti­mate the max­i­mum dis­tance from which lions, spot­ted hye­nas and zebras could detect stripes, using infor­ma­tion about these ani­mals’ visual capabilities.

They found that beyond 50 metres in day­light or 30 metres at twi­light, when most preda­tors hunt, stripes can be seen by humans but are hard for zebra preda­tors to dis­tin­guish. And on moon­less nights, the stripes are par­tic­u­larly dif­fi­cult for all species to dis­tin­guish beyond 9 metres. This sug­gests that the stripes don’t pro­vide cam­ou­flage in wood­land areas, where it had ear­lier been the­o­rized that black stripes mim­ic­ked tree trunks and white stripes blended in with shafts of light through the trees.

And in open, tree­less habi­tats, where zebras tend to spend most of their time, the researchers found that lions could see the out­line of striped zebras just as eas­ily as they could see similar-​sized prey with fairly solid-​coloured hides, such as water­buck and topi, and the smaller impala. It had been ear­lier sug­gested that the strip­ing might dis­rupt the out­line of zebras on the plains, where they might oth­er­wise be clearly vis­i­ble to their predators.

Zebras stripingPho­tographs of a (a) plains, (b) moun­tain, and © Grevy’s zebra, and (d) African wild ass in the Tier­park Zoo, Berlin.
All pho­tos by Tim Caro of UC Davis.
PLOS ONE, 2016, Zebra Stripes through the Eyes of Their Preda­tors, Zebras, and Humans. Amanda D. Melin, Don­ald W. Kline, Chi­hiro Hira­matsu, Tim Caro (doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0145679.g001)

Stripes also not for social pur­poses
In addi­tion to dis­cred­it­ing the cam­ou­flag­ing hypoth­e­sis, the study did not yield evi­dence sug­gest­ing that the strip­ing pro­vides some type of social advan­tage by allow­ing other zebras to rec­og­nize each other at a distance.

While zebras can see stripes over some­what fur­ther dis­tances than their preda­tors can, the researchers also noted that other species of ani­mals that are closely related to the zebra are highly social and able to rec­og­nize other indi­vid­u­als of their species, despite hav­ing no strip­ing to dis­tin­guish them.


(Source: UC Davis news release, 22.01.2016)


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