Další formáty:
BibTeX
LaTeX
RIS
@article{1707216, author = {Dračková, Tereza and Smolinský, Radovan and Hiadlovská, Zuzana and Dolinay, Matej and Martínková, Natália}, article_number = {4}, doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.25225/jvb.20029}, keywords = {colouration; Reptilia; image analysis; colour pattern; RGB; CIELAB}, language = {eng}, issn = {2694-7684}, journal = {Journal of Vertebrate Biology}, title = {Quantifying colour difference in animals with variable patterning}, url = {https://doi.org/10.25225/jvb.20029}, volume = {69}, year = {2020} }
TY - JOUR ID - 1707216 AU - Dračková, Tereza - Smolinský, Radovan - Hiadlovská, Zuzana - Dolinay, Matej - Martínková, Natália PY - 2020 TI - Quantifying colour difference in animals with variable patterning JF - Journal of Vertebrate Biology VL - 69 IS - 4 SP - 1-9 EP - 1-9 SN - 26947684 KW - colouration KW - Reptilia KW - image analysis KW - colour pattern KW - RGB KW - CIELAB UR - https://doi.org/10.25225/jvb.20029 L2 - https://doi.org/10.25225/jvb.20029 N2 - Colour pattern influences behaviour and affects survival of organisms through perception of light reflectance. Spectrophotometric methods used to study colour optimise precision and accuracy of reflectance across wavelengths, while multiband photographs are generally used to assess the complexity of colour patterns. Using standardised photographs of sand lizards (Lacerta agilis), we compare how colours characterised using point measurements (using the photographs, but simulating spectrophotometry) on the skin differ from colours estimated by clustering pixels in the photograph of the lizard's body. By taking photographs in the laboratory and in the field, the experimental design included two 2-way comparisons. We compare point vs. colour clustering characterisation and influence of illumination in the laboratory and in the field. We found that point measurements adequately represented the dominant colour of the lizard. Where colour patterning influenced measurement geometry, image analysis outperformed point measurement with respect to stability between technical replicates on the same animal. The greater colour variation derived from point measurements increased further under controlled laboratory illumination. Both methods revealed lateral colour asymmetry in sand lizards, i.e. that colours subtly differed between left and right flank. We conclude that studies assessing the impact of colour on animal ecology and behaviour should utilise hyperspectral imaging, followed by image analysis that encompasses the whole colour pattern. ER -
DRAČKOVÁ, Tereza, Radovan SMOLINSKÝ, Zuzana HIADLOVSKÁ, Matej DOLINAY a Natália MARTÍNKOVÁ. Quantifying colour difference in animals with variable patterning. \textit{Journal of Vertebrate Biology}. 2020, roč.~69, č.~4, s.~1-9. ISSN~2694-7684. Dostupné z: https://dx.doi.org/10.25225/jvb.20029.
|