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How keratin cortex thickness affects iridescent feather colours

Authors :
Deok-Jin Jeon
Seungmuk Ji
Eunok Lee
Jihun Kang
Jiyeong Kim
Liliana D'Alba
Marie Manceau
Matthew D. Shawkey
Jong-Souk Yeo
Source :
ROYAL SOCIETY OPEN SCIENCE
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The bright, saturated iridescent colours of feathers are commonly produced by single and multi-layers of nanostructured melanin granules (melanosomes), air and keratin matrices, surrounded by an outer keratin cortex of varying thicknesses. The role of the keratin cortex in colour production remains unclear, despite its potential to act as a thin film or absorbing layer. We use electron microscopy, optical simulations and oxygen plasma-mediated experimental cortex removal to show that differences in keratin cortex thickness play a significant role in producing colours. The results indicate that keratin cortex thickness determines the position of the major reflectance peak (hue) from nanostructured melanosomes of common pheasant ( Phasianus colchicus ) feathers. Specifically, the common pheasant has appropriate keratin cortex thickness to produce blue and green structural colours. This finding identifies a general principle of structural colour production and sheds light on the processes that shaped the evolution of brilliant iridescent colours in the common pheasant.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20545703
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
ROYAL SOCIETY OPEN SCIENCE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ec6162e039b57d76518adc70197e4d0a