TY - JOUR
T1 - Impact of time since collection on avian eggshell color
T2 - A comparison of museum and fresh egg specimens
AU - Cassey, Phillip
AU - Maurer, Golo
AU - Duval, Camille
AU - Ewen, John G.
AU - Hauber, Mark E.
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgements We are extremely grateful to Douglas Russell, Robert Prŷs-Jones (NHM, Tring), and Brian Gill (Auckland Museum) for assisting us with access to museum collections. Doug Armstrong provided housing in New Zealand and Nikki MacArthur helped locate nests. An earlier version of this manuscript was considerably improved by constructive comments from László Garamszegi and two anonymous reviewers. This study would not have been possible without the practical support and advice of Rebecca Boulton. Funding was provided by a Leverhulme Trust Project Grant and a Human Frontier Science Program Young Investigator Grant to PC and MEH.
PY - 2010
Y1 - 2010
N2 - Studies of avian eggshell coloration have been a long-standing research focus in behavioral evolutionary ecology. Museum collections have provided a widely used resource because they allow efficient sampling across broad temporal, geographical, and taxonomic ranges, even for species that are rare and for which sampling in the wild is ethically or practically unwarranted. We used reflectance spectrophotometry across the avian visual spectrum to compare eggshell color of specimens of the song thrush (Turdus philomelos) in two museums (Natural History Museum, UK and Auckland Museum, New Zealand) with each other and with eggshells collected fresh in New Zealand. These data enabled us to test the effects of source and storage in different museums, as well as time since collection, across four metrics of eggshell coloration: blue-green and ultraviolet chroma, overall brightness, and the spectral coefficient of variation. Variation within an egg, within a clutch, and among clutches, was similar between the two museum datasets but different from those of fresh eggs. We found significant differences in all four metrics between the collections, and that fresh eggshells reflected stronger in the blue-green wavelength than in museum eggs. This difference is most likely due to different preservation techniques and storage histories. Furthermore, an effect of time since collection was only apparent in the blue-green chroma and was higher in more recent museum eggshell samples. Our results support the use of historic museum samples in intraspecific studies of shell coloration providing that efforts are made to compare specimens, which were collected during similar periods.
AB - Studies of avian eggshell coloration have been a long-standing research focus in behavioral evolutionary ecology. Museum collections have provided a widely used resource because they allow efficient sampling across broad temporal, geographical, and taxonomic ranges, even for species that are rare and for which sampling in the wild is ethically or practically unwarranted. We used reflectance spectrophotometry across the avian visual spectrum to compare eggshell color of specimens of the song thrush (Turdus philomelos) in two museums (Natural History Museum, UK and Auckland Museum, New Zealand) with each other and with eggshells collected fresh in New Zealand. These data enabled us to test the effects of source and storage in different museums, as well as time since collection, across four metrics of eggshell coloration: blue-green and ultraviolet chroma, overall brightness, and the spectral coefficient of variation. Variation within an egg, within a clutch, and among clutches, was similar between the two museum datasets but different from those of fresh eggs. We found significant differences in all four metrics between the collections, and that fresh eggshells reflected stronger in the blue-green wavelength than in museum eggs. This difference is most likely due to different preservation techniques and storage histories. Furthermore, an effect of time since collection was only apparent in the blue-green chroma and was higher in more recent museum eggshell samples. Our results support the use of historic museum samples in intraspecific studies of shell coloration providing that efforts are made to compare specimens, which were collected during similar periods.
KW - Birds
KW - Egg color
KW - Fading
KW - Reflectance spectrophotometry
KW - Ultraviolet
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U2 - 10.1007/s00265-010-1027-8
DO - 10.1007/s00265-010-1027-8
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:77956767021
SN - 0340-5443
VL - 64
SP - 1711
EP - 1720
JO - Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology
JF - Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology
IS - 10
ER -