Abstract A combination of burrowing behaviour and very efficient background matching makes the brown shrimp Crangon crangon almost invisible to potential predators and prey. This raises questions on how shrimp succeed in concealing themselves in the heterogeneous and dynamic estuarine habitats they inhabit and what type of environmental variables and behavioural factors affect their colour change abilities. Using a series of behavioural experiments, we show that the brown shrimp is capable of repeated fast colour adaptations (20% change in dark pigment cover within one hour) and that its background matching ability is mainly influenced by illumination and sediment colour. Novel insights are provided on the occurrence of non-adaptive (possib...
Visual physiologies are diverse, and an organism\u27s ability to perceive a visual signal depends on...
Camouflage is widespread throughout the natural world and conceals animals from predators in a vast ...
Phenotypic flexibility may incur a selective advantage in changing and heterogeneous environments, a...
A combination of burrowing behaviour and very efficient background matching makes the brown shrimp C...
Abstract\ud \ud Background\ud Colour and shape polymor...
A core concept of camouflage is that strong phenotype–environment associations are essential, i.e., ...
Estuaries are dynamic systems in which biotic and abiotic conditions vary remarkably. Survival in th...
Animal colouration is often a trade-off between background matching for camouflage from predators, a...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Springer Nature via the ...
For any prey animal, avoiding and fleeing from predators is one of the most important tasks in the k...
Animals can evade predators in multiple ways, one of the most effective of which is to avoid detecti...
External colouration in animals depends on the interaction of several different factors including th...
<div><p>Camouflage is widespread throughout the natural world and conceals animals from predators in...
1. Animals from many taxa, from snakes and crabs to caterpillars and lobsters, change appearance wi...
Camouflage is perhaps the most widespread anti-predator strategy in nature, found in numerous animal...
Visual physiologies are diverse, and an organism\u27s ability to perceive a visual signal depends on...
Camouflage is widespread throughout the natural world and conceals animals from predators in a vast ...
Phenotypic flexibility may incur a selective advantage in changing and heterogeneous environments, a...
A combination of burrowing behaviour and very efficient background matching makes the brown shrimp C...
Abstract\ud \ud Background\ud Colour and shape polymor...
A core concept of camouflage is that strong phenotype–environment associations are essential, i.e., ...
Estuaries are dynamic systems in which biotic and abiotic conditions vary remarkably. Survival in th...
Animal colouration is often a trade-off between background matching for camouflage from predators, a...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Springer Nature via the ...
For any prey animal, avoiding and fleeing from predators is one of the most important tasks in the k...
Animals can evade predators in multiple ways, one of the most effective of which is to avoid detecti...
External colouration in animals depends on the interaction of several different factors including th...
<div><p>Camouflage is widespread throughout the natural world and conceals animals from predators in...
1. Animals from many taxa, from snakes and crabs to caterpillars and lobsters, change appearance wi...
Camouflage is perhaps the most widespread anti-predator strategy in nature, found in numerous animal...
Visual physiologies are diverse, and an organism\u27s ability to perceive a visual signal depends on...
Camouflage is widespread throughout the natural world and conceals animals from predators in a vast ...
Phenotypic flexibility may incur a selective advantage in changing and heterogeneous environments, a...