1997
DOI: 10.2307/4089305
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Carotenoid Availability and Plumage Coloration in a Wild Population of Northern Cardinals

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Cited by 85 publications
(57 citation statements)
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“…In support of this, several studies have found different ornaments to reflect different aspects of mate quality. For example, ornamental colours that are made up of different pigments often reflect different qualities; carotenoid pigments usually reflect physical condition (Hill & Montgomerie, 1994;Linville & Breitwisch, 1997;Olson & Owens, 1998;McGraw & Hill, 2000), especially disease condition (reviewed by Møller et al, 2000), whereas melanin-based colours mostly reflect social status (reviewed in Senar, 1999; but see Fitze & Richner, 2002). An example of this is the ornamentation of the American goldfinch (Carduelis tristis) where carotenoid-based plumage and bill coloration are sensitive to infection by intestinal coccidians, whereas the melanin-based black cap is not but instead may be shaped by social interactions (McGraw & Hill, 2000).…”
Section: (A) Estimation Of Overall Qualitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In support of this, several studies have found different ornaments to reflect different aspects of mate quality. For example, ornamental colours that are made up of different pigments often reflect different qualities; carotenoid pigments usually reflect physical condition (Hill & Montgomerie, 1994;Linville & Breitwisch, 1997;Olson & Owens, 1998;McGraw & Hill, 2000), especially disease condition (reviewed by Møller et al, 2000), whereas melanin-based colours mostly reflect social status (reviewed in Senar, 1999; but see Fitze & Richner, 2002). An example of this is the ornamentation of the American goldfinch (Carduelis tristis) where carotenoid-based plumage and bill coloration are sensitive to infection by intestinal coccidians, whereas the melanin-based black cap is not but instead may be shaped by social interactions (McGraw & Hill, 2000).…”
Section: (A) Estimation Of Overall Qualitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…diet, health, parasites). For example, Northern Cardinals (Cardinalis cardinalis) grew less red plumage in the year after which a deep winter cold spell dramatically reduced fruit availability (Linville and Breitwisch 1997). However, in these cases, data have not been available to examine changes in the condition of the birds for which the annual colour change was observed.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In both sexes, yellow crests were more colourful and heavily pigmented in 2002 than in 2003. Prior studies of carotenoid- (Linville and Breitwisch 1997) and melanin-based (Otter and Ratcliffe 1999) plumage colouration in birds have used across-year differences in colouration to infer that it is under environmental control (e.g. diet, health, parasites).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, it is still unclear to what degree the acquisition of carotenoids versus other environmental interactions influences the final expression of color [46]. For example, both natural [23] and controlled experiments [24] suggest that environmental variation consists of more than just the acquisition of the pigments. In a meta-analysis of many different studies, Olson and Owens [47] concluded that the link between diet and carotenoid plumage coloration was important, but the degree of connection varied phylogenetically and on the type of coloration (red versus yellow).…”
Section: Diet and Conditionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Carotenoids are a diverse class of light-absorbing molecules, each absorbing light at slightly different wavelengths, and the reflected color is due to the type of carotenoid or combination of different types present in the feather [22]. Because the hue and intensity of color in part reflects the quality of diet (at least the quantity of carotenoids in the diet, but see [23,24]), carotenoidderived plumage coloration can communicate habitat quality, foraging efficiency, and individual health to conspecifics, and there has been considerable interest in their role as honest-signals of fitness within the framework of sexual selection [25]. However, because of this environmental variation, measurements of carotenoid colors for the reconstruction of phylogenetic relationships should be approached carefully, with full appreciation of the important role of environment in the expression of these pigments across and within populations.…”
Section: Nature Of Avian Plumage Colorationmentioning
confidence: 99%