ASU researchers finds novel chemistry at
work to provide parrot’s vibrant red
colors
Parrots, long a favorite pet animal, are
attractive to owners because of their vibrant
colors. But those colors may mean more to
parrots than what meets the eye.
For
more than a century, biochemists have
known that parrots use an unusual set
of pigments to produce their rainbow
of plumage colors, but their biochemical
identity has remained elusive. Now,
an Arizona State University researcher
has uncovered the chemistry behind the
colors of parrots, describing on a molecular
level what is responsible for their
bright red feathers.
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The work casts a new light on what is
chemically responsible for the colors
of birds, and defies previous assumptions
and explanations for color variations
in parrots, said Kevin McGraw, an assistant
professor in ASU’s School of Life
Sciences. "Evolutionary biologists
have not really thought hard about parrot
coloration," said McGraw. "This
research is exposing a whole new world
of color communication in parrots and
the potential physiological and biochemical
roles of the new molecules we found in
our work."
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Details of the work are in a paper, "Distribution
of unique red feather pigments in parrots,"
by McGraw and Mary Nogare, a parrot fancier
from Snoqualmie, Wash., published in the Feb.
16, 2005 issue of the journal Biology Letters.
Animals, like birds and fishes, commonly use
biochromes like carotenoids to acquire red,
orange or yellow coloration, but McGraw and
Nogare found that these compounds are not
responsible for the red colors found in the
parrot species they sampled.
The researchers used a chemical analysis
technique called high-performance liquid chromatography
to survey the pigments present in red parrot
feathers. McGraw and Nogare collected and
analyzed samples from 44 parrot species that
have red feathers. Overall, there are some
350 species of parrots, 80 percent of which
have red in their plumage.
They found a suite of five molecules, called
polyenal lipochromes (or psittacofulvins),
that color parrot plumage red in all of the
species studied. "We’ve uncovered
a system where all red parrots use the same
set of molecules to color themselves,"
McGraw said. "It is a unique pigment
found nowhere else in the world. We are fascinated
at how parrots are able to do this. "The
fact that there is a single set of molecules
unique to and widespread among parrots, suggests
that it is a pretty important evolutionary
novelty, and one we should carefully consider
when we think about why parrots are so strikingly
colorful," McGraw said.
McGraw has been studying the colors of birds
for seven years. He first became interested
in the behavioral significance of bird colors
as a form of visual communication within a
species (e.g. to denote status or attractiveness).
As he studied these aspects, he wanted to
understand more about what makes the colors
of the birds possible, and then focused on
"deconstructing the color into its component
parts."
McGraw said an interesting aspect of the
five polyenal lipochromes that provide the
red in parrots, is that the pigment is found
only in the bird’s feathers and nowhere
else in the body of the bird, indicating that
parrots manufacture these molecules internally
and directly at the maturing follicles of
the growing, colorful plumage.
In addition, these pigments may play a valuable
role in maintaining the health of parrots.
McGraw cites an independent study on the parrot
pigments that suggests that they can act as
anti-oxidants to quench free radicals and
potentially protect cells and tissues in the
body from oxidative damage.
Now, McGraw says, he’s interested in
learning more about the connection between
the red colors and anti-oxidants within and
among parrot species, as well as "to
specifically explore the balance of naturally
and sexually selected costs and benefits to
becoming colorful.
"Parrots are unusual among birds, in
that they almost without exception display
fantastic colors but exhibit very little variation
in color within a species – at least
in colors visible to us. Parrots in general
may not be using color in the classic cases
of mate choice or competitive ability,"
he said. "Exactly why they are so uniformly
colored remains an interesting mystery to
us – one we want to investigate."
"There is a sea of colors in birds,"
he added. "Our goal is to learn why there
is such a diversity from an evolutionary standpoint."