Abstract:
For a successful hunt, marine sit-and-wait predators such as the scorpionfishes need to be
well camouflaged in the eyes of their prey. While scorpionfishes are indeed cryptic to the
human eye, there is barely any research on the functionality of their camouflage in a preypredator
context. Therefore, my research investigated camouflage strategies in two
scorpionfish species under consideration of the prey’s visual perspective. I focussed on the
question how scorpionfish can camouflage in a heterogeneous environment with a variety of
backgrounds, such as different kinds of substrates. In camouflage research, three main
strategies are discussed as a solution to this problem. First, animals could dynamically adjust
their body colour and pattern depending on their background. Second, animals might choose
to settle on backgrounds on which they are best camouflaged and avoid others. Third, animals
could have a generalist body colouration that allows camouflage on many natural substrates
and therefore mitigates the need to employ dynamic camouflage strategies such as colour
change and background choice.
In two experiments, I placed scorpionfish on different backgrounds and documented changes
in body colouration over one to five minutes using calibrated photography. I used visual
modelling to process the images accounting for the visual system properties of prey fishes as
naturally relevant observers. I confirmed that scorpionfish dynamically change their body
colouration in response to their background, including body hue, luminance, and pattern
contrast. In two behavioural choice experiments, I then tested whether scorpionfish prefer to
settle on backgrounds that facilitate camouflage. Here, scorpionfish did not choose the
background that provided the best background match for their average body colouration, but
preferred the background that allowed disruptive colouration. Finally, using data of average
scorpionfish body colouration and photographs of natural substrates, I calculated how well
scorpionfish would match these substrates from the prey’s perspective. I can show that even
without adjustment, scorpionfish have low chromatic (colour) contrast to natural substrates,
but high achromatic (luminance) contrast.
I demonstrate that scorpionfish show several strategies to camouflage in heterogeneous
environments. I discuss how they might interact and interpret the importance of achromatic
and chromatic cues for camouflage in these fishes.