Eumelanin and pheomelanin are the most common vertebrate pigments. They generate different colours and are synthesized under different physiological conditions. While pheomelanogenesis requires high levels of a key intracellular antioxidant (glutathione, GSH), eumelanogenesis is inhibited by GSH. This implies that species that present the molecular basis to produce large amounts of pheomelanin might be more limited to perform other costly processes that generate oxidative stress than species that produce eumelanin. Brain development requires large amounts of energy and antioxidants during ontogeny, so that large-brained species may be constrained in their simultaneous synthesis of large amounts of pheomelanin, but not in their synthesis of ...
Body mass (g), brain mass (g), eumelanic and pheomelanic plumage colour score, mean breeding latitud...
Many animals use carotenoid pigments to produce yellow, orange, and red coloration. In birds, at lea...
Studies on melanin-based color variation in a context of natural selection have provided a wealth of...
Eumelanin and pheomelanin are the most common vertebrate pigments. They generate different colours a...
Sexual dichromatism (SD) often reflects intense sexual selection on males. It has been hypothesized ...
Pigments determine the appearance of organisms. However, pigment production can be associated to phy...
Phaeomelanin is a common pigment that confers a reddish color to animals. Since phaeomelanogenesis r...
1. Melanins are the most common pigments in vertebrates and, as such, fufill multiple adaptive funct...
Melanins are the most common pigments providing coloration in the plumage and bare skin of birds and...
Even though plumage diversity is one of the most diverse phenotypic traits in nature, the reasons wh...
© 2017 John Wiley & Sons LtdPheomelanin contributes to the pigmentation phenotype of animals by prod...
Pigment-based plumage colouration and its physiological properties have attracted many researchers t...
Body mass (g), brain mass (g), eumelanic and pheomelanic plumage colour score, mean breeding latitud...
Many animals use carotenoid pigments to produce yellow, orange, and red coloration. In birds, at lea...
Studies on melanin-based color variation in a context of natural selection have provided a wealth of...
Eumelanin and pheomelanin are the most common vertebrate pigments. They generate different colours a...
Sexual dichromatism (SD) often reflects intense sexual selection on males. It has been hypothesized ...
Pigments determine the appearance of organisms. However, pigment production can be associated to phy...
Phaeomelanin is a common pigment that confers a reddish color to animals. Since phaeomelanogenesis r...
1. Melanins are the most common pigments in vertebrates and, as such, fufill multiple adaptive funct...
Melanins are the most common pigments providing coloration in the plumage and bare skin of birds and...
Even though plumage diversity is one of the most diverse phenotypic traits in nature, the reasons wh...
© 2017 John Wiley & Sons LtdPheomelanin contributes to the pigmentation phenotype of animals by prod...
Pigment-based plumage colouration and its physiological properties have attracted many researchers t...
Body mass (g), brain mass (g), eumelanic and pheomelanic plumage colour score, mean breeding latitud...
Many animals use carotenoid pigments to produce yellow, orange, and red coloration. In birds, at lea...
Studies on melanin-based color variation in a context of natural selection have provided a wealth of...