Otago Daily Times

Parrot plumage pigment production probed

- JOHN GIBB

DO you ever get in a flap over how vivid feathers can seem?

Does it make you ponder how parrots produce such intensely bright plumage?

A University of Otagoled project may have just helped to solve the latter tantalisin­g mystery.

Lead author Jonathan Barnsley, a PhD candidate at Otago’s DoddWalls Centre for Photonic and Quantum Technologi­es, says parrots are highly unusual in how they produce their distinctiv­e red and yellow feather colours.

Most birds create such colours by two wellknown methods.

Blue, green and purple are generated when light is reflected off microscopi­c layers in the feathers.

Most other colours, including red and yellow, are made when light is absorbed by chemically different pigments.

But parrots are unusual because their red and yellow feathers contained chemically similar pigments, raising questions about how the colours were produced.

‘‘It certainly has been a mystery for a long time.

‘‘Nature is remarkably complex,’’ Mr Barnsley said.

He and his team, whose findings have been published in Royal Society Open Science, discovered that red and yellow pigments in parrot feathers interact with light in different ways.

This was possibly because pigment molecules in red feathers were ‘‘communicat­ing’’ with each another.

The researcher­s probed parrot feathers, using a laserbased technique, which revealed a diverse group of pigment components interactin­g with one another.

The base colour of these components was actually orange, and they became red only when they were interactin­g together in the feather.

The researcher­s found that red pigments had a ‘‘diversity of chromophor­es’’.

Chromophor­es are molecules, or parts of a molecule, that absorb visible light.

Chromophor­e diversity could come about when molecules interacted or communicat­ed with their nearest neighbours to ‘‘change how one another absorbs light’’, he said.

Such colourtuni­ng was known in crustacean­s, but had not previously been observed in feathers, he said.

Coauthor Dr Daniel Thomas, of Massey University, said it was possible parrots were able to tune pigments to produce many colours, including the magenta of a galah.

Mr Barnsley said the research was ‘‘exciting’’ and it was ‘‘always good to get it out there’’ through publicatio­n.

 ?? PHOTOS: JONATHAN BARNSLEY ?? New light . . . A laser probes a parrot feather, showing its pigment components. Inset: a closeup of a parrot feather.
PHOTOS: JONATHAN BARNSLEY New light . . . A laser probes a parrot feather, showing its pigment components. Inset: a closeup of a parrot feather.
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 ??  ?? Jonathan Barnsley
Jonathan Barnsley

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