According to a study led by Princeton University researchers, the secret to how birds -- such as peacocks and hummingbirds produce brilliant shimmering colours lies in a key feature of the feather's nanoscale design.
The findings of the study were published in the journal 'eLife'.
The researchers found an evolutionary tweak in feather nanostructure that has more than doubled the range of iridescent colours birds can display. This insight could help researchers understand how and when brilliant iridescence first evolved in birds, as well as inspire the engineering of new materials that can capture or manipulate light.
As iridescent birds move, nanoscale structures within their feathers' tiny branch-like filaments -- known as barbules -- interact with light to amplify certain wavelengths depending on the viewing angle. This iridescence is known as structural colouration, wherein crystal-like nanostructures manipulate light.
"If you take a single barbule from an iridescent feather, cross-section it and put it under an electron microscope, you'll see an ordered structure with black dots, or sometimes black rings or platelets, within a grey substrate," said first author Klara Norden, a PhD student in the lab of senior author Mary Caswell Stoddard, associate professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at Princeton and associated faculty in Princeton's High Meadows Environmental Institute (HMEI).
"The black dots are pigment-filled sacs called melanosomes, and the grey surrounding them is feather keratin. I find these nanoscale structures just as beautiful as the colours they produce," added Norden.
Curiously, the melanosome structures come in a variety of shapes. They can be rod-shaped or platelet-shaped, solid or hollow. Hummingbirds, for example, tend to have hollow, platelet-shaped melanosomes, while peacocks have rod-shaped melanosomes.
But why birds evolved iridescent nanostructures with so many different types of melanosomes has been a mystery, with scientists unsure if some melanosome types are better than others at producing a broad range of vibrant colours.
To answer this question, the researchers combined evolutionary analysis, optical modelling and plumage measurements -- all of which allowed them to uncover general design principles behind iridescent feather nanostructures.
Norden and Stoddard worked with co-author Chad Eliason, a postdoctoral fellow at The Field Museum, to first survey the literature and compile a database of all described iridescent feather nanostructures in birds, which included more than 300 species. They then used a family tree of birds to illustrate which groups evolved the different melanosome types.
There are five primary types of melanosomes in iridescent feather nanostructures: thick rods, thin rods, hollow rods, platelets and hollow platelets. Except for thick rods, all of these melanosome types are found in brilliantly coloured plumage. Because the ancestral melanosome type is rod-shaped, previous work focused on the two obvious features unique to iridescent structures: platelet shape and hollow interior.
However, when the researchers evaluated the results of their survey, they realised that there was a third melanosome feature that has been overlooked -- thin melanin layers. All four melanosome types in iridescent feathers -- thin rods, hollow rods, platelets and hollow platelets -- create thin melanin layers, much thinner than a structure built with thick rods. This is important because the size of the layers in the structures is key to producing vibrant colours, Norden said.
"Theory predicts that there is a kind of Goldilocks zone in which the melanin layers are just the right thickness to produce really intense colours in the bird-visible spectrum," she said.
"We suspected that thin rods, platelets or hollow forms may be alternative ways to reach that ideal thickness from the much larger ancestral melanosome size -- the thick rods," she added.
The researchers tested their idea on bird specimens at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City by measuring the colour of iridescent bird plumage that results from nanostructures with different melanosome types.
They also used optical modelling to simulate the colours that would be possible to produce with different types of melanosomes. From these data, they determined which feature -- thin melanin layers, platelet shape or hollowness -- has the greatest influence on the range and intensity of colour.
Combining the results of the optical modelling and plumage analyses, the researchers determined that thin melanin layers -- no matter the shape of the melanosomes -- nearly doubled the range of colours an iridescent feather could produce.
"This key evolutionary breakthrough -- that melanosomes could be arranged in thin melanin layers -- unlocked new colour-producing possibilities for birds," Stoddard said.
"The diverse melanosome types are like a flexible nanostructural toolkit, offering different routes to the same end: brilliant iridescent colours produced by thin melanin layers," Stoddard added.
This may explain why there exists such a great diversity of melanosome types in iridescent nanostructures. Iridescent nanostructures likely evolved many times in different groups of birds, but, by chance, thin melanin layers evolved from a thick rod in different ways.
Some groups evolved thin melanin layers by flattening the melanosomes (producing platelets), others by hollowing out the interior of the melanosome (producing hollow forms), and yet others by shrinking the size of the rod (producing thin rods).
The findings of the study could be used to reconstruct brilliant iridescence in prehistoric animals, Norden said. Melanosomes can be preserved in fossil feathers for millions of years, which means that palaeontologists can infer original feather colour -- even iridescence -- in birds and dinosaurs by measuring the size of fossilized melanosomes.
"Based on the thick solid rods that have been described in the plumage of Microraptor, for example, we can say that this feathered theropod likely had iridescent plumage much more like that of a starling than that of a peacock," Norden said.
The composition of melanosomes and keratin in bird feathers could hold clues for engineering advanced iridescent nanostructures that can efficiently capture or manipulate light, or be used to produce eco-friendly paints that do not require dyes or pigments.
Super-black coatings such as Vantablack similarly use nanostructures that absorb and disperse rather than reflect light, similar to the black plumage of species in the birds-of-paradise (Paradisaeidae) family.
Iridescent feathers also could lead to a richer understanding of multifunctional materials, Norden said. Unlike human-made materials, which are often developed for a single function, natural materials are inherently multipurpose.
Melanin not only helps produce iridescence; it also protects birds from dangerous ultraviolet radiation, strengthens feathers and inhibits microbial growth.
"What if the different types of melanosomes initially evolved for some reason unrelated to the iridescent colour -- such as for making the feather mechanically stronger, or more resistant to microbial attack. These are some of the questions we are excited to tackle next," Norden said.
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