Biology:Animals that can change color

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A Carolina anole changing from green to brown over the course of a few minutes

Many animals are capable of changing their colors with varying degrees of transformation. In some, it is to camouflage themselves and is very gradual (shedding of fur or feathers) and seasonal, occurring only a couple of times a year. In other animals more rapid changes may be a form of signalling.

Examples

Examples of animals that change color include:

Mammals and birds

  • Alaskan hare - In the summer, Alaskan hares have a brown fur coat with white under parts. In the winter, they have a white fur coat with black-tipped ears. They also shed their gray-brown summer topcoat, becoming all white during the winter.[1]
  • Arctic hare - In Newfoundland and southern Labrador, the Arctic hare changes its coat color, moulting and growing new fur, from brown or grey in the summer to white in the winter, like some other Arctic animals including ermine and ptarmigan, enabling it to remain camouflaged as the environment changes.[2] However, the Arctic hares in the far north of Canada , where summer is very short, remain white all year round.[2]
  • Rock ptarmigan
  • Willow ptarmigan
  • Snowshoe hare
  • Stoat

Reptiles and amphibians

  • Chameleons‎
  • Anoles - The majority of anoles (dactyloidae) can change their color depending on things like emotions (for example, aggression or stress), activity level, levels of light and as a social signal (for example, displaying dominance).
  • Frogs e.g. Gray treefrog and Peron's tree frog (which has the ability to change colour in less than one hour). 

Molluscs

Fish

  • Many fish change colors, including several species of gobies and groupers. Color changes may be initiated by changes in mood, temperature, and stress in addition to visible changes in the local environment.
  • Flounder e.g. Hippoglossina oblonga
  • Syngnathidae (including seahorses)

Insects and spiders

  • Charidotella sexpunctata - Adults can turn from shiny gold through reddish-brown when disturbed.[5]
  • Misumena vatia - The color change from white to yellow (depending on the color of the flowers on which the spider is hunting) takes between 10 and 25 days; the reverse about six days. 
  • Chrysso venusta has been observed to rapidly change its color when disturbed.
  • Some spiders, including Cyrtophora cicatrosa, can change colour rapidly.[6]

See also

References

  1. DeBruine, Lisa. "Lepus othus Alaskan hare". Animal Diversity Web. http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/accounts/Lepus_othus/. Retrieved 1 March 2013. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 "Arctic Wildlife". Arctic Wildlife. Churchill Polar Bears. 2011. http://churchillpolarbears.org/churchill/arctic-wildlife. Retrieved January 30, 2012. 
  3. "integument (mollusks)."Encyclopædia Britannica. 2009. Encyclopædia Britannica 2006 Ultimate Reference Suite DVD
  4. Ramirez, M. D.; Oakley, T. H (2015). "Eye-independent, light-activated chromatophore expansion (LACE) and expression of phototransduction genes in the skin of Octopus bimaculoides". Journal of Experimental Biology 218 (10): 1513–1520. doi:10.1242/jeb.110908. PMID 25994633. PMC 4448664. http://jeb.biologists.org/content/jexbio/218/10/1513.full.pdf. 
  5. Murray, T. Golden Tortoise Beetle. Garden Friends and Foes. Washington State University, Whatcom County Extension.
  6. "Spider Ecology". Earth-Life Web Productions. http://www.earthlife.net/chelicerata/s-ecology.html.