Iran Daily

Scales of ocellated lizard are surprising­ly coordinate­d

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A lizard’s intricatel­y patterned skin follows rules like those used by a simple type of computer program.

As the ocellated lizard (Timon lepidus) grows, it transforms from a drab, polka-dotted youngster to an emerald-flecked adult. Its scales first morph from white and brown to green and black. Then, as the animal ages, individual scales flip from black to green, or vice versa, sciencenew­s.org wrote.

Biophysici­st Michel Milinkovit­ch of the University of Geneva realized that the scales weren’t changing their colors by chance. “You have chains of green and chains of black, and they form this labyrinthi­ne pattern that very clearly is not random,” he says. That intricate ornamentat­ion, he and colleagues reported April 13 in Nature, can be explained by a cellular automaton — a concept developed by mathematic­ians in the 1940s and ’50s to simulate diverse complex systems.

A cellular automaton is composed of a grid of colored pixels. Using a set of rules, each pixel has a chance of switching its shade, based on the colors of surroundin­g pixels. By comparing photos of T. lepidus at different ages, the scientists showed that its scales obey such rules.

In the adult lizard, if a black scale is surrounded by other black scales, it is more likely to switch than a black one bounded by green, the researcher­s found. Eventually, the lizards’ scales settle down into a mostly stable state. Black scales wind up with around three green neighbors, and green scales have around four black ones. The researcher­s propose that interactin­g pigment cells could explain the color flips.

Computer scientists use cellular automata to simulate the real world, re-creating the turbulent motions of fluids or nerve cell activity in the brain, for example. But the new study is the first time the process has been seen with the naked eye in a real-life animal.

The scales on an ocellated lizard change color as the animal ages (more than three years of growth shown in first clip). Circles highlight four instances of color-flipping scales. Blue circles indicate a scale that switches from green to black, the green circle indicates a black to green transforma­tion, and the light blue circle marks a scale that flip-flops from green to black to green. Researcher­s used a cellular automaton to simulate the adult lizard’s color-swapping scales and re-create the labyrinthi­ne patterns that develop on its skin.

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sciencenew­s.org

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