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Concealing-Coloration in the Animal Kingdom

Concealing-Coloration in the Animal Kingdom: An Exposition of the Laws of Disguise Through Color and Pattern; Being a Summary of Abbott H. Thayer's Discoveries is a book published ostensibly by Gerald H. Thayer in 1909, and revised in 1918, but in fact a collaboration with and completion of his father Abbott Handerson Thayer's major work.

Concealing-Coloration in the Animal Kingdom
Cover of first edition
AuthorGerald H. Thayer
Illustrator
CountryUS
SubjectCamouflage
GenreNatural history
PublisherMacmillan
Publication date
1909 (1909)

The book, illustrated artistically by Abbott Thayer, sets out the controversial thesis that all animal coloration has the evolutionary purpose of camouflage. Thayer rejected Charles Darwin's theory of sexual selection, arguing in words and paintings that even such conspicuous animal features as the peacock's tail or the brilliant pink of flamingoes or roseate spoonbills were effective as camouflage in the right light.

The book introduced the concepts of disruptive coloration to break up an object's outlines, of masquerade, as when a butterfly mimics a leaf, and especially of countershading, where an animal's tones make it appear flat by concealing its self-shadowing.

The book was criticised by big game hunter and politician Theodore Roosevelt for its central assertion that every aspect of animal coloration is effective as camouflage. Roosevelt's detailed reply attacked the biased choice of examples to suit Abbott Thayer's thesis and the book's reliance on unsubstantiated claims in place of evidence. The book was more evenly criticised by zoologist and camouflage researcher Hugh Cott, who valued Thayer's work on countershading but regretted his overenthusiastic attempts to explain all animal coloration as camouflage. Thayer was mocked to a greater or lesser extent by other scientific reviewers.

Overview edit

 
Angel, oil painting by Abbott Thayer, 1887

Abbott Thayer (1849–1921) was an American artist, known for his figure paintings, often of "virginal, spiritual beauty", which were sometimes, as in his most famous painting, Angel, modeled on his children.[1] He had studied at an art school in Paris, but unlike James McNeill Whistler he returned to the United States. Along with seeking timeless beauty, Thayer also became obsessed with nature, which he felt contained the pure beauty that he was seeking to capture in his paintings.[1]

Thayer's close observation led him to notice what scientists such as Edward Bagnall Poulton were just beginning to describe.[2] This was that many animals were "painted" the opposite way to how painters create the appearance of solidity in figures. A canvas is flat, and areas of uniform color painted on a canvas also appear flat. To make a body appear to have depth and solidity, the artist paints in shadows on the body itself. The top of an animal's back, facing the sky, remains bright, while it must become darker towards its underside. Thayer was excited to realize that by reversing such shading, nature could and did make animals appear flat. He was so passionate about this "concealing coloration" theory that he called it his "second child".[1] Poulton had noticed countershading in certain caterpillars, but he had not realized that the phenomenon was widespread, and he championed Thayer's theory in a 1902 article in Nature.[3]

However, Thayer was not a scientist, and he lacked a scientist's inclination to attempt to test and disprove every aspect of a new theory.[3] Instead, Thayer came to believe that the theory belonged to artists, with their trained perception: "The whole basis of picture making consists in contrasting against its background every object in the picture", he argued.[1]

The obsession led him to deny that animals could be colored for other reasons: for protection by mimicry, as the naturalist Henry Walter Bates had proposed, supported by many examples of butterflies from South America; through sexual selection, as Charles Darwin had argued, again supported by many observations. The unbalanced treatment of animal coloration in Concealing-Coloration in the Animal Kingdom encapsulates Thayer's partial understanding and his rejection of other theories.[4][5]

The same obsession led him, later, to attempt to persuade the military to adopt camouflage based on his ideas, traveling to London in 1915, and writing "passionate letters" to the Assistant Secretary to the US Navy, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, in 1917.[1]

Approach edit

 
Abbott Thayer introduced the concept of Countershading in the book
 
Title page of first edition

Text edit

Gerald Thayer describes the book as having two main purposes: to present Abbott Thayer's research to naturalists; and to make the subject available to a wider readership.[P 1]

The book's list of contents reveals Thayer's heavy reliance on bird examples, filling 16 of the 27 chapters. Other vertebrates occupy 5 chapters. Insects receive 3 chapters, of which two are dedicated to lepidoptera - one to caterpillars, one to adult butterflies and moths; the remaining one devotes 14 pages to all other insects, starting with orthoptera including the leaf-mimic grasshoppers.[P 1]

Illustrations edit

The book has 16 colored plates of paintings by Abbott Thayer and Richard S. Meryman, including the well known frontispiece "Peacock amid foliage", and the heavily criticised images of wood ducks, blue jays against snow, roseate spoonbills and flamingoes "at dawn or sunset, and the skies they picture". The last 4 colored plates are of caterpillars. Gerald Thayer claims that "The illustrations are of particular importance, inasmuch as they include what we believe to be the first scientific paintings ever published of animals lighted as they actually are in nature".[P 1]

There are 140 black and white figures, mainly photographs with a few diagrams and drawings. Half the photographs are of birds. The photographs are from various sources, "gleaned from periodicals, or secured by special advertising."[P 2]

Contents edit

Introduction by Abbott H. Thayer. An essay on the psychological and other basic principles of the subject.
  1. Outline of the book's scope. "The Law which underlies Protective Coloration"
  2. Definition of terms. Obliterative Shading
  3. First principles of the use of markings with obliterative shading
  4. Picture-patterns, with obliterative shading, on birds. American Woodcock, and Snipe
  5. Picture-patterns on obliteratively-shaded birds, continued. Terrestrial Goatsuckers
  6. Picture-patterns on counter-shaded birds. Forest Grouse, Owls, European Woodcock
  7. Picture-patterns on counter-shaded birds, continued. Grass-patterns, heather-patterns
  8. Picture-patterns on counter-shaded birds, continued. Scansorial (climbing) birds
  9. Picture-patterns on counter-shaded birds, continued. Shore-birds
  10. Picture-patterns on counter-shaded birds, continued. Reed-patterns, etc., of Bitterns
  11. Background-picturing on counter-shaded birds, continued. Marsh-birds. Wood Duck
  12. Background-picturing on counter-shaded birds, continued. Birds of the ocean
  13. Birds, etc. The inherent 'obliterative' power of markings. 'Ruptive' and 'Secant' patterns
  14. Birds, etc. Special functions of markings
  15. Birds. Masking of bill and feet for offensive purposes
  16. Birds, etc. The manifold obliterative power of iridescence
  17. Birds, etc. Appendages, and their part in 'obliteration'
  18. Birds: miscellany. "Mimicry" (vs 'obliteration')
  19. Birds, concluded
  20. Mammals
  21. Mammals, continued
  22. Mammals, concluded
  23. Fishes
  24. Reptiles and Amphibians
  25. Caterpillars
  26. A glance at Insects other than Lepidoptera
  27. Butterflies and Moths

Outline edit

 
Fig. 7. "White fowl, lacking counter-shading, against a flat white cloth. To show that a monochrome object can not be 'obliterated', no matter what its background."

Chapter 1 sets out the "long-ignored laws" of "protective coloration", an act which "has waited for an artist" to perceive. Thayer explains the principle of countershading with a diagram, arguing that a naive view of being "colored like their surroundings" does not explain how animal camouflage works. He acknowledges the prior work of Edward Bagnall Poulton (The Colours of Animals, 1890) in identifying countershading in caterpillars, quoting some passages where Poulton describes how larvae and pupae can appear flat. Countershading is named as "the law which underlies protective coloration", rather than as one of several principles.

Chapter 2 defines the book's terms, equating "mimicry" with "protective resemblance", so that it becomes a form of "protective or disguising coloration". Thayer distinguishes "concealing-colors" (mainly countershading for "invisibility") from the "other" branch of protective coloration, which includes most kinds of mimicry, for "deceptive visibility". The two branches are then named "obliterative coloration" and "mimicry". Mimicry is dismissed as playing "a very insignificant part" in the "higher orders", i.e. it is limited mainly to invertebrates. A fine photograph of a "white fowl, lacking counter-shading, against a flat white cloth" demonstrates that camouflage is more than color matching. Thayer then gives several examples of what he considers countershaded animals.

Chapter 3 describes the combination of markings with countershading, with photographs of a model bird and of a woodcock, showing how in the correct position these are well camouflaged with "wonderful obliterative picture-patterns", but wrongly positioned or upside down (with a photograph of a dead woodcock) they are easily visible.

Chapters 4 and 5 illustrate more "picture-patterns" in well camouflaged birds including Wilson's snipe and whip-poor-will (nighthawks and goatsuckers, Caprimulgidae). Thayer describes these as showing "obliteration, or merging with the background" but that their patterning is close to mimicry as they "perfectly" resemble objects such as "a stone or mossy log".

Chapter 6 argues that some birds such as the ruffed grouse have patterns designed as camouflage against distant backgrounds, with a painting of a bird against a forest background as evidence. "The bird is in plain sight, but invisible". For the great horned owl, a piece of the wing is "super-imposed" on a photograph of a wood, "to show how closely the owl's patterns reproduce such a forest interior." The text describes the owl as having "a highly developed forest-vista pattern". Chapter 7 similarly argues for grass and heather patterns on "terrestrial" (as opposed to arboreal) birds. The disruptively patterned white-tailed ptarmigan is shown in "a very remarkable photograph" by Evan Lewis. Thayer attempts to classify the camouflage types, for example writing

The principal feature of the pattern made by grasses over ground is a more or less intricate lace-work of crisscrossing, light-colored, linear forms, some straight, some curled and twisted, relieving with varying intensity against dark.

— Thayer[P 3]

Chapter 8 continues the theme with "scansorial" or tree climbing birds. Chapter 9 claims that "obliterative shading, pure and simple, is the rule among the Shore Birds" such as sandpipers and curlew. Chapter 10 describes the "background-picturing" of bitterns, birds which live in reedbeds, where

The light stripes on the bill were repeated and continued by the light stripes on the sides of the head and neck, and together they imitated very closely the look of separate, bright reed-stems; while the dark stripes pictured reeds in shadow, or the shadowed interstices between the stems.

— Thayer[P 4]

Chapter 11 argues (in a way that was heavily criticised when the book appeared, see below) that water birds, some of them highly conspicuous like the jacana and notoriously the male wood duck, are colored for camouflage: "The beautifully contrasted black-and-white bars on the flanks of the Wood Duck (Aix sponsa) are ripple pictures, and as potent [as camouflage], in their place, as the most elaborate markings of land birds".[P 5] Chapter 12 argues that the "pure white" of ocean birds such as gulls and terns equally functions as camouflage. Thayer admits that these often appear conspicuous, but argues that against varied backgrounds, white offers "the greatest average inconspicuousness against the ocean" (his italics) or against the bright sky when seen from below.

Chapter 13 analyses "markings and patterns in detail, starting with a color plate that shows the effect of disruptive patterning, which Thayer calls "strong 'secant' and 'ruptive' patterns". Using a photograph of an oystercatcher at its nest by Cherry and Richard Kearton, Thayer argues that the boldly marked bird (mainly black above, white below, with red beak) is both countershaded and "ruptively" patterned. Chapter 14 discusses the barred markings of hawks and owls, with further fine plates of photographs by the Keartons of disruptively patterned waders and their cryptic chicks. The ringed plover is described as having "eye-masking and 'obliterative' shadow-and-hole-picturing pattern".

Chapter 15 describes the leg feather patterns of hawks, asserting that these "pantaloons" mask these "dangerous talons" to facilitate attack, just as their beaks, like the beaks of wading birds, are masked paradoxically with "gaudy colors". Chapter 16 controversially claims that the iridescent colours of, for example, the speculum wing patch of the mallard and other ducks is "obliterative", the "brightly changeable plumage" serving to camouflage the wearer in varying conditions. Thayer asserts that such brightly colored species as the European kingfisher and the purple gallinule are camouflaged:

Iridescence should perhaps be considered second only to obliterative [counter]shading as a factor in the disguisement of birds; its universality attests its value.

— Thayer[P 6]

Chapter 17 argues that bird plumage has "many devices" to conceal the animals' outlines. Even the "enormously developed feather-appendages" of the birds of paradise are argued to provide camouflage in this way. Sexual display is mentioned but dismissed as not being the sole reason for the colours, outlines and patterns of the male birds. Chapter 18 briefly discusses mimicry, before returning to "the evident paramount importance of the obliterative function", this time of the "brilliant, flowerlike" heads of hummingbirds. The one case that Thayer admits is mimetic is the goatsucker of Trinidad, a plant mimic that perches "by day and night" on a tree stump or branch, where the purpose of the mimicry is crypsis. Chapter 19 concludes the description of bird plumage, claiming that birds from the tropical forests to the "snowy north", including woodpeckers and the blue jay are all "colored for inconspicuousness".

Chapters 20, 21, and 22 discuss the "disguising-coloration" of mammals, including the whales which "are equipped with a full obliterative shading of surface-colors". The bats are admitted to have very little in the way of countershading, unlike all other families in the order. Thayer notes that a few species with strong defences[6] such as hedgehogs, porcupines, echidnas, pangolins and "some armadillos" are exceptions, along with some beasts which "enjoy a like security by virtue of their gigantic bigness", including the elephants, rhinoceroses, and hippopotamuses. The domestic hare is shown to be strongly countershaded with a pair of photographs "from life", one sitting and one "laid on its back, outdoors, so that the obliterative shading is reversed". Chapter 21 asserts that zebras "must be extraordinarily inconspicuous" against vegetation, a claim derided by Theodore Roosevelt (see below). Chapter 22 addresses the problem of the "few [beasts] whose bold, clear patterns seem to defy that foremost obliterative law." These include the skunks, the African zoril (striped polecat) and the teledu (stink badger) of Java, which all have dark underparts and white upperparts. Thayer dismisses the aposematism of these species, instead asserting the effectiveness of their camouflage:

Skunks, teledus, and the rest, long believed by naturalists to be colored for warning conspicuousness (proclaimant of their foul defensive equipment), have, in fact, the universal obliterative coloration.

— Thayer[P 7]
 
Copperhead Snake - full-page card cutout, to fit over the painting of the same snake among leaves
 
Copperhead Snake among Leaves - painting, showing effective disruptive pattern

Several photographs using stuffed skins of skunks attempt to prove the point. The chapter goes on to claim that roseate spoonbills, flamingoes, and prongbuck are all obliteratively colored. The raccoon's head resembles "the end of a hollow stump or log", while its tail is said to be "distractive", the strong banding serving like an eyespot to divert the attention of a predator to the tail rather than the head while the animal dives down a hole. But Thayer is unable to resist arguing that when "quiet, their tail-bands act obliteratively".

Chapter 23 looks at fish, admitting frankly that the authors "know next to nothing about fishes from the standpoint of systematic science", but saying that they have gathered a "trustworthy general estimate" of their "disguising coloration" from market stalls, museums and books. Many fish are countershaded. The bioluminescence of some deep sea fish and other animals is seen as a problem as it is not "obliterative"; the possibility of counterillumination camouflage is not considered.

Chapter 24 considers the reptiles and amphibians. These are noted to be predominantly green, often with "ruptive" patterns. Plate 11 treats a "Copperhead snake on dead leaves", the caption explaining that "This is a bona-fide study of a Copperhead Snake among dead leaves—its normal situation." There is a full-page sheet of card, cut out in the shape of the snake lying on a bed of leaves. When this is folded back, a painting by Rockwell Kent and Abbott Thayer "(Also G.H. Thayer and E.B. Thayer)" is revealed, showing the snake's outline powerfully disrupted by its zigzag pattern among the light and shade of the leaf litter.

 
Larger-spotted beech-leaf-edge caterpillar, both on leaf and detached, the other way up, revealing strong countershading

Chapter 24 mentions that some terrestrial salamanders "are rather brightly pied with black and whitish, or yellow", while other amphibians "are extremely gaudy—wearing much bright blue, green, purple and sometimes red." It suggests that some of these markings are "baits or targets", again to distract predators from striking at the head, while the salamander markings are left as a problem as the authors "know too little about the habits" of these species. It is admitted that "the disguising coloration of many of them is very obscure."

The final chapters 25, 26 and 27 turn to the insects. Chapter 25 looks at caterpillars, with, as Poulton had earlier noted, convincing examples of countershading. Plate 13 shows caterpillars including the "larger-spotted beech-leaf-edge caterpillar" both in position "passing for a part of the leaf on which it is feeding", strongly cryptic and flattened like a slightly browning leaf, and inverted, when its countershading makes it appear conspicuously solid. Chapter 26 looks at other insects and spiders, noting the "famous leaf-mimicking Kallima inachus[7]" butterfly of India, but again claiming that even conspicuous butterflies are in fact "obliterative". Eye-spots are mentioned, but instead of noting that these might be distractive, they are asserted to be "dazzling", appearing as holes, and thus functioning as disruptive camouflage.

The text ends with a paragraph that asks if it is "any wonder that artists should feel keen delight in looking at the disguising-patterns worn by animals?" These are "triumphs of art", where the student can find "in epitome, painted and perfected by Nature herself", the typical color and pattern scheme of each kind of landscape.

Color and pattern, line and shading,—all are true beyond the power of man to imitate, or even fully to discern.

— Thayer[P 8]

An appendix provides extracts from a "very remarkable addition to our subject", Poulton's 1907 observations of color change in chameleons.

Reception edit

Contemporary reviews edit

Theodore Roosevelt edit

The Thayers' views were vigorously criticised in 1911 by Theodore Roosevelt, an experienced big game hunter[8] and naturalist familiar with animal camouflage as well as a politician, in a lengthy article in the Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History.[5][9]

Roosevelt begins by writing that the Thayers expounded the "doctrine" of concealing coloration "in its extreme form", which he thought had been "pushed to such a fantastic extreme and to include such wild absurdities as to call for the application of common sense thereto." Then, "to show the sweeping claims made", Roosevelt quotes verbatim eight passages from the book, one after the other, 500 words in all, the last one being "'All patterns and colors whatsoever of all animals that ever prey or are preyed upon are under certain normal circumstances obliterative.'"[10]

 
Abbott Thayer and Richard Meryman painted Peacock in the Woods for Thayer's 1909 book. The image wrongly suggests that even the male bird's brilliant plumage functions as camouflage.

He then observes that the Thayers' claims, both in "pictures" and in writing, are not so much arguments as plain "misstatements of facts, or wild guesses put forward as facts." He puts these down to enthusiasm rather than dishonesty, and as an example critiques the picture (the book's frontispiece) of the peacock in a tree[11]

with the blue sky showing through the leaves in just sufficient quantity here and there to warrant the author-artists explaining that the wonderful blue hues of the peacock's neck are obliterative because they make it fade into the sky.[11]

This, Roosevelt writes, would be an extremely rare sight in nature. Worse, the female (the peahen) would, he argues, be conspicuous in those conditions. The Thayers have chosen a blue sky to argue that the peacock is camouflaged; but then they choose a white sky to allow the prongbuck's white rump to fade into that background. This, Roosevelt argues, is so dishonest that an engineer who constructed a report in that way would at once be dismissed, and the directors of a corporation who "tried to float shares on the strength of such a report" would be liable to "prosecution for fraud".[11]

Roosevelt had recently returned from his African safari, having seen, admired and shot large numbers of animals.[12] He was scornful of Thayer's theories, which he described as "phantasmagoria", and the writer as "a well meaning and ill-balanced enthusiast". Thayer's suggestion that the white markings on the body of the harnessed bush buck are meant to resemble "flecks of water shine" is dismissed as wild, with the observation from personal experience that bush buck spend little time in watery places, while the "situtunga or lechwe, which lack the spots" spend more.[13] Roosevelt does not refrain from harshness: he describes the camouflaged flamingo theory as "probably the wildest" of "all the wild absurdities to which Mr. Thayer has committed himself".[14]

The Auk edit

 
In Roseate Spoonbills 1905–1909, Thayer tried to show that even the bright pink of these conspicuous birds had a cryptic function.
 
Male Wood Duck in a Forest Pool painted by Thayer for the book, to argue that the male duck's conspicuous plumage was disruptively patterned, rather than sexual dimorphism.

Thayer was also roundly criticised in 1911 by herpetologist Thomas Barbour and conservation pioneer John C. Phillips[15] in The Auk, where they wrote that[16]

Mr. Thayer, however, along with most other enthusiasts in a field with which they can be but partially familiar, has gone too far and claimed too much.

— Barbour and Phillips[16]

Barbour and Phillips warmly welcome Thayer's work on countershading "which he has so excellently demonstrated"; they "protest gently" against his "slightly patronizing" treatment of the camouflage of birds like woodcock and grouse "which has been known and recognized since ornithology began"; and go on to the attack on his claims for the flamingo:[16]

Flamingoes hardly need this carefully arranged protection that is of value but a few minutes each day, and to be sure we see the curious cloud arrangement depicted on but very few days of the year – if ever.

— Barbour and Phillips[16]

They are equally critical of his roseate spoonbill, observing that the painting looks nothing like "actual skins of the species". As for the wood duck, they point out its [sexual] "dimorphism of plumage", and that the male spends the summer in eclipse plumage, while he is[16]

most brilliant during the late autumn, winter, and early spring, when their surroundings are of a dead and monotonous color. Hence, if we attributed any protective importance to such color patterns, we should be inclined to consider this of distinct disadvantage."

— Barbour and Phillips[16]

Barbour and Phillips note that Thayer "in his enthusiasm, has ignored or glossed over [sexual dimorphism] with an artistic haze." They also question whether every animal needs protection. "By skilful jugglings we are shown how anything and everything may be rendered inconspicuous," citing the skunk among other boldly black and white animals with both the skunk coloration and the "well-known skunk smell". They conclude by writing that they have "purposely omitted calling special attention to the strong features of the book" and that they have no axe to grind.[16]

The Making of Species edit

The English ornithologists Douglas Dewar and Frank Finn write in their 1909 book The Making of Species that Thayer "seems to be of opinion that all animals are cryptically or, as he calls it, concealingly or obliteratively coloured". They note that Edward Bagnall Poulton had written approvingly of Thayer, and that Thayer had asserted that almost all animals were countershaded. They agree that countershading exists, but to his suggestion that it is universal "we feel sorely tempted to poke fun at him", and promptly ask any reader who agrees with Thayer that every animal is countershaded to look at a flock of rooks at sunset.[17] They admit that camouflage is in general advantageous, but point out that the different plumages of seasonally and sexually dimorphic birds cannot all be explained as camouflage, considering the conspicuous colours of the male birds:

Now, if it be a matter of life-and-death importance to a bird to be protectively coloured, we should expect the showily coloured cock birds to be far less numerous than the dull-plumaged hens... [but] cock birds ... appear to be as least as numerous as the hens. Nor can it be said that this is due to their more secretive habits.

— Dewar and Finn[18]

They counter the further argument that hens may be in more danger than cocks, through sitting on nests, by observing that in many dimorphic species, the showy cock shares the work of incubating the eggs.[18]

Modern assessment edit

Hugh Cott edit

 
"Thayer straining the theory to a fantastic extreme":[19] White Flamingoes, Red Flamingoes and The Skies They Simulate (dawn or dusk), painted for the book by Abbott Thayer

The zoologist and camouflage expert Hugh Cott, in his 1940 book Adaptive Coloration in Animals, writes that

The theory of concealing coloration has been brought to some discredit through the tendency of certain writers to be carried away from the facts by their own enthusiasm, and they have brought down storms of criticism which are sometimes misdirected against the theory itself... Thus we find Thayer straining the theory to a fantastic extreme in an endeavour to make it cover almost every type of coloration in the animal kingdom.

— Hugh Cott[19]

Cott attacks Thayer's comprehensive assertion that "all patterns and colors whatsoever...are obliterative",[19] and continues more specifically with a detailed rebuttal of both the text and Thayer's contrived paintings:

Unfortunately certain of Thayer's explanations and illustrations misrepresent nature and are deceptive because they depend upon observations made under abnormal circumstances.

— Hugh Cott[19]

Cott then gives the examples of the peacock in the woods with the blue sky behind the neck; the "flock of red Flamingoes matching a red sunset sky",[20] and the roseate spoonbill "whose pink plumage matches a pink cloud scheme".[20] He then lists the cases of the white flamingo, the skunk and the white rump of the prongbuck, quoting Roosevelt ("The raven's coloration is of course concealing if it is put into a coal scuttle"[20]), notes "How unreasonable are extreme views like that adopted by Thayer",[20] and admits that criticisms of "certain of Thayer's conclusions"[20] are justified, before returning to the attack on those critics, robustly defending the "theory of protective and aggressive resemblance".[20]

More favourably, Cott explicitly recognises Thayer's work on countershading, though granting Edward Bagnall Poulton's partial anticipation with his work on the chrysalis of the purple emperor butterfly. Further, Cott quotes Thayer's description of countershading, and Cott's Figure 1, of countershaded fish, is captioned "Diagrams illustrating Thayer's principle of obliterative shading".[21] Implicitly, also, Cott follows Thayer in his Figure 3 "Larva of Eyed Hawk-moth"[21] in both "natural (e.g. 'up-side-down')"[21] and "unnatural"[21] positions; in his Figure 5 drawing of the disruptive effect of the stripes and bold markings of woodcock chicks (like Thayer's Figure 81); in his Plate 7, with (just like Thayer's Figure 7) a photograph of a white cock against a white background; in his Figure 18 and front cover drawings of a copperhead snake lying on a bed of leaves, with and without its disruptive pattern (like Thayer's Plate 11) and so on.[21]

John Endler and Peter Forbes edit

The evolutionary biologist John Endler, reviewing the topic of camouflage in Proceedings of the Royal Society B in 2006, cites Thayer's 1909 book three times: for disruption, with "conspicuous elements [which] distract the predator's attention and break up the body outline, making detection of the prey difficult";[22] for "masquerade, [where] the prey is detected as distinct from the visual background but not recognized as edible.., for example by resembling a leaf";[22] and for countershading, where "False gradients are common in animal colour patterns, leading to misleading appearance of shape, even when they do not disrupt the body outline".[22] Thayer is by far the earliest source used by Endler; the only other early source he cites (for disruption) is Hugh Cott's 1940 Adaptive Coloration in Animals.[23]

The art and science writer Peter Forbes notes that Thayer became obsessed by the "flattening effect" of countershading, and that far from being a scientist, he was "an artist whose idealist fervour, edged by deep insecurity, led him to regard his findings less as discovery than as revelation."[22] Describing Concealing-Coloration as a "magnum opus",[22] Forbes writes that by 1909 "Thayer's prophetic intolerance was in full flood",[22] that he was overcompensating for his need for approval of his artwork, and that he failed to see that acceptance of ideas in science does not depend on "the vehemence with which they are expressed".[22] In Forbes's view, Thayer was battling for the rights of artists over scientists, citing Thayer ("it properly belongs to the realm of pictorial art"[22]) in evidence. Apart from Thayer's "bizarre"[22] flamingos, Forbes calls Thayer's opposition to Batesian mimicry "extreme".[22] For Forbes, "Reading Thayer's book today is a strange experience. He sets out with the idea that every single creature is perfectly camouflaged",[22] and then "tries to bludgeon his readers"[22] into agreeing. Forbes is critical of Thayer's rejection of warning coloration, quoting Thayer's daughter Gladys as writing "My father's special mission was tasting butterflies";[22] Thayer apparently wanted to prove that mimicry was the wrong explanation as both model and mimic tasted the same. Forbes observes that natural selection did not have to contend with human reactions to the taste of butterflies.[22]

David Rothenberg edit

The philosopher and jazz musician David Rothenberg, in his 2012 book Survival of the Beautiful on the relationship between aesthetics and evolution,[24] argues that while the Thayers' book set out the principles of camouflage: "From observation of nature ... art contributed to the military needs of society", Thayer, following Charles Darwin, was "swept up in the idea that every animal had evolved to perfectly live in its surroundings", but was emotionally unable to accept the other "half" of Darwin's view of animal coloration:[25]

Thayer was quite troubled by Darwin's whole notion of sexual selection to explain the evolution of taste and beauty... On the contrary, all animal patterning can be explained by the need to remain .. hidden.. Even what appears garish, including the tail of the peacock, is in fact a sophisticated form of camouflage that can dupe even such a great scientist as Charles Darwin.

— David Rothenberg[25]

Rothenberg then discusses the Thayers' account of the wood duck, which Rothenberg calls "our most garishly colored duck". He explains that the Thayers believed they, "trained as artists", had seen what earlier observers had missed:[26]

The black and white patches and stripes are 'ripple pictures depicting motion and reflections in the water', all ingeniously evolved to hide the bird not by inconspicuousness but by 'disruptive conspicuousness'.

— David Rothenberg[26]

Smithsonian American Art Museum edit

The Smithsonian American Art Museum's website, describing the Thayers' book as "controversial", writes sceptically that[27]

Even bright pink flamingoes would vanish against a similar colored sky at sunset or sunrise. No matter that at times their brilliant feathers were highly visible, their coloration would protect them from predators at crucial moments so that "the spectator seems to see right through the space occupied by an opaque animal." Not all readers were convinced.

— Smithsonian Art Museum[27]

References edit

Primary edit

  1. ^ a b c Thayer, 1909. p viii.
  2. ^ Thayer, 1909. p ix.
  3. ^ Thayer, 1909. p 46.
  4. ^ Thayer, 1909. p 57.
  5. ^ Thayer, 1909. p 62.
  6. ^ Thayer, 1909. p 95.
  7. ^ Thayer, 1909. p 148.
  8. ^ Thayer, 1909. p 240.

Secondary edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Meryman, 1999.
  2. ^ Poulton, 1890.
  3. ^ a b Forbes, 2009. p. 74.
  4. ^ Forbes, 2009. pp. 73-84.
  5. ^ a b Wright, Patrick (23 June 2005). "Cubist Slugs. Review of DPM: Disruptive Pattern Material; An Encyclopedia of Camouflage: Nature – Military – Culture by Roy Behrens". London Review of Books. 27 (12): 16–20.
  6. ^ Many of these species also have deimatic displays, deliberately making themselves conspicuous.
  7. ^ It is spelled "inachis" in the text.
  8. ^ Hunting in Many Lands: The Book of the Boone and Crockett Club (1895), Roosevelt, Theodore (Editor).
  9. ^ Roosevelt, Theodore (1911). "Revealing and concealing coloration in birds and mammals". Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History. 30 (Article 8): 119–231. hdl:2246/470.
  10. ^ Roosevelt, 1911. pp 121-122.
  11. ^ a b c Roosevelt, 1911. pp 123-124.
  12. ^ Rothenburg, 2011. p 137.
  13. ^ Roosevelt, 1911. p 194.
  14. ^ Roosevelt, 1911. p 228.
  15. ^ Coolidge, Harold (September 1963). (PDF). IUCN. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 5, 2012. Retrieved December 7, 2012.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g Barbour, Thomas; Phillips, John C (April 1911). "Concealing Coloration Again". The Auk. 28 (2): 179–188. doi:10.2307/4071434. JSTOR 4071434.
  17. ^ Dewar & Finn, 1909. pp 184, 187.
  18. ^ a b Dewar & Finn, 1909. pp 201-202.
  19. ^ a b c d Cott, 1940. p 172.
  20. ^ a b c d e f Cott, 1940. p 173.
  21. ^ a b c d e Cott, 1940. pp36-37, facing p48, and pp66-67
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Forbes, 2009. pp. 76–79
  23. ^ Endler, John A (October 2006). "Disruptive and cryptic coloration". Proceedings of the Royal Society B. 273 (1600): 2425–2426. doi:10.1098/rspb.2006.3650. PMC 1634903. PMID 16959630.
  24. ^ Forbes, Peter (February 10, 2012). "The Guardian". Survival of the Beautiful by David Rothenberg - review. Retrieved December 7, 2012.
  25. ^ a b Rothenberg, 2011. pp 132-133.
  26. ^ a b Rothenberg, 2011. p 134.
  27. ^ a b "Search Collections". Male Wood Duck in a Forest Pool, study for book Concealing Coloration in the Animal Kingdom. Smithsonian American Art Museum. Retrieved December 7, 2012.

Bibliography edit

External links edit

  • Smithsonian American Art Museum: Blue Jays in Winter

concealing, coloration, animal, kingdom, exposition, laws, disguise, through, color, pattern, being, summary, abbott, thayer, discoveries, book, published, ostensibly, gerald, thayer, 1909, revised, 1918, fact, collaboration, with, completion, father, abbott, . Concealing Coloration in the Animal Kingdom An Exposition of the Laws of Disguise Through Color and Pattern Being a Summary of Abbott H Thayer s Discoveries is a book published ostensibly by Gerald H Thayer in 1909 and revised in 1918 but in fact a collaboration with and completion of his father Abbott Handerson Thayer s major work Concealing Coloration in the Animal KingdomCover of first editionAuthorGerald H ThayerIllustratorAbbott Handerson Thayer Richard S MerymanCountryUSSubjectCamouflageGenreNatural historyPublisherMacmillanPublication date1909 1909 The book illustrated artistically by Abbott Thayer sets out the controversial thesis that all animal coloration has the evolutionary purpose of camouflage Thayer rejected Charles Darwin s theory of sexual selection arguing in words and paintings that even such conspicuous animal features as the peacock s tail or the brilliant pink of flamingoes or roseate spoonbills were effective as camouflage in the right light The book introduced the concepts of disruptive coloration to break up an object s outlines of masquerade as when a butterfly mimics a leaf and especially of countershading where an animal s tones make it appear flat by concealing its self shadowing The book was criticised by big game hunter and politician Theodore Roosevelt for its central assertion that every aspect of animal coloration is effective as camouflage Roosevelt s detailed reply attacked the biased choice of examples to suit Abbott Thayer s thesis and the book s reliance on unsubstantiated claims in place of evidence The book was more evenly criticised by zoologist and camouflage researcher Hugh Cott who valued Thayer s work on countershading but regretted his overenthusiastic attempts to explain all animal coloration as camouflage Thayer was mocked to a greater or lesser extent by other scientific reviewers Contents 1 Overview 2 Approach 2 1 Text 2 2 Illustrations 3 Contents 4 Outline 5 Reception 5 1 Contemporary reviews 5 1 1 Theodore Roosevelt 5 1 2 The Auk 5 1 3 The Making of Species 5 2 Modern assessment 5 2 1 Hugh Cott 5 2 2 John Endler and Peter Forbes 5 2 3 David Rothenberg 5 2 4 Smithsonian American Art Museum 6 References 6 1 Primary 6 2 Secondary 7 Bibliography 8 External linksOverview edit nbsp Angel oil painting by Abbott Thayer 1887Abbott Thayer 1849 1921 was an American artist known for his figure paintings often of virginal spiritual beauty which were sometimes as in his most famous painting Angel modeled on his children 1 He had studied at an art school in Paris but unlike James McNeill Whistler he returned to the United States Along with seeking timeless beauty Thayer also became obsessed with nature which he felt contained the pure beauty that he was seeking to capture in his paintings 1 Thayer s close observation led him to notice what scientists such as Edward Bagnall Poulton were just beginning to describe 2 This was that many animals were painted the opposite way to how painters create the appearance of solidity in figures A canvas is flat and areas of uniform color painted on a canvas also appear flat To make a body appear to have depth and solidity the artist paints in shadows on the body itself The top of an animal s back facing the sky remains bright while it must become darker towards its underside Thayer was excited to realize that by reversing such shading nature could and did make animals appear flat He was so passionate about this concealing coloration theory that he called it his second child 1 Poulton had noticed countershading in certain caterpillars but he had not realized that the phenomenon was widespread and he championed Thayer s theory in a 1902 article in Nature 3 However Thayer was not a scientist and he lacked a scientist s inclination to attempt to test and disprove every aspect of a new theory 3 Instead Thayer came to believe that the theory belonged to artists with their trained perception The whole basis of picture making consists in contrasting against its background every object in the picture he argued 1 The obsession led him to deny that animals could be colored for other reasons for protection by mimicry as the naturalist Henry Walter Bates had proposed supported by many examples of butterflies from South America through sexual selection as Charles Darwin had argued again supported by many observations The unbalanced treatment of animal coloration in Concealing Coloration in the Animal Kingdom encapsulates Thayer s partial understanding and his rejection of other theories 4 5 The same obsession led him later to attempt to persuade the military to adopt camouflage based on his ideas traveling to London in 1915 and writing passionate letters to the Assistant Secretary to the US Navy Franklin Delano Roosevelt in 1917 1 Approach edit nbsp Abbott Thayer introduced the concept of Countershading in the book nbsp Title page of first editionText edit Gerald Thayer describes the book as having two main purposes to present Abbott Thayer s research to naturalists and to make the subject available to a wider readership P 1 The book s list of contents reveals Thayer s heavy reliance on bird examples filling 16 of the 27 chapters Other vertebrates occupy 5 chapters Insects receive 3 chapters of which two are dedicated to lepidoptera one to caterpillars one to adult butterflies and moths the remaining one devotes 14 pages to all other insects starting with orthoptera including the leaf mimic grasshoppers P 1 Illustrations edit The book has 16 colored plates of paintings by Abbott Thayer and Richard S Meryman including the well known frontispiece Peacock amid foliage and the heavily criticised images of wood ducks blue jays against snow roseate spoonbills and flamingoes at dawn or sunset and the skies they picture The last 4 colored plates are of caterpillars Gerald Thayer claims that The illustrations are of particular importance inasmuch as they include what we believe to be the first scientific paintings ever published of animals lighted as they actually are in nature P 1 There are 140 black and white figures mainly photographs with a few diagrams and drawings Half the photographs are of birds The photographs are from various sources gleaned from periodicals or secured by special advertising P 2 Contents editIntroduction by Abbott H Thayer An essay on the psychological and other basic principles of the subject dd Outline of the book s scope The Law which underlies Protective Coloration Definition of terms Obliterative Shading First principles of the use of markings with obliterative shading Picture patterns with obliterative shading on birds American Woodcock and Snipe Picture patterns on obliteratively shaded birds continued Terrestrial Goatsuckers Picture patterns on counter shaded birds Forest Grouse Owls European Woodcock Picture patterns on counter shaded birds continued Grass patterns heather patterns Picture patterns on counter shaded birds continued Scansorial climbing birds Picture patterns on counter shaded birds continued Shore birds Picture patterns on counter shaded birds continued Reed patterns etc of Bitterns Background picturing on counter shaded birds continued Marsh birds Wood Duck Background picturing on counter shaded birds continued Birds of the ocean Birds etc The inherent obliterative power of markings Ruptive and Secant patterns Birds etc Special functions of markings Birds Masking of bill and feet for offensive purposes Birds etc The manifold obliterative power of iridescence Birds etc Appendages and their part in obliteration Birds miscellany Mimicry vs obliteration Birds concluded Mammals Mammals continued Mammals concluded Fishes Reptiles and Amphibians Caterpillars A glance at Insects other than Lepidoptera Butterflies and MothsOutline edit nbsp Fig 7 White fowl lacking counter shading against a flat white cloth To show that a monochrome object can not be obliterated no matter what its background Chapter 1 sets out the long ignored laws of protective coloration an act which has waited for an artist to perceive Thayer explains the principle of countershading with a diagram arguing that a naive view of being colored like their surroundings does not explain how animal camouflage works He acknowledges the prior work of Edward Bagnall Poulton The Colours of Animals 1890 in identifying countershading in caterpillars quoting some passages where Poulton describes how larvae and pupae can appear flat Countershading is named as the law which underlies protective coloration rather than as one of several principles Chapter 2 defines the book s terms equating mimicry with protective resemblance so that it becomes a form of protective or disguising coloration Thayer distinguishes concealing colors mainly countershading for invisibility from the other branch of protective coloration which includes most kinds of mimicry for deceptive visibility The two branches are then named obliterative coloration and mimicry Mimicry is dismissed as playing a very insignificant part in the higher orders i e it is limited mainly to invertebrates A fine photograph of a white fowl lacking counter shading against a flat white cloth demonstrates that camouflage is more than color matching Thayer then gives several examples of what he considers countershaded animals Chapter 3 describes the combination of markings with countershading with photographs of a model bird and of a woodcock showing how in the correct position these are well camouflaged with wonderful obliterative picture patterns but wrongly positioned or upside down with a photograph of a dead woodcock they are easily visible Chapters 4 and 5 illustrate more picture patterns in well camouflaged birds including Wilson s snipe and whip poor will nighthawks and goatsuckers Caprimulgidae Thayer describes these as showing obliteration or merging with the background but that their patterning is close to mimicry as they perfectly resemble objects such as a stone or mossy log Chapter 6 argues that some birds such as the ruffed grouse have patterns designed as camouflage against distant backgrounds with a painting of a bird against a forest background as evidence The bird is in plain sight but invisible For the great horned owl a piece of the wing is super imposed on a photograph of a wood to show how closely the owl s patterns reproduce such a forest interior The text describes the owl as having a highly developed forest vista pattern Chapter 7 similarly argues for grass and heather patterns on terrestrial as opposed to arboreal birds The disruptively patterned white tailed ptarmigan is shown in a very remarkable photograph by Evan Lewis Thayer attempts to classify the camouflage types for example writing The principal feature of the pattern made by grasses over ground is a more or less intricate lace work of crisscrossing light colored linear forms some straight some curled and twisted relieving with varying intensity against dark Thayer P 3 Chapter 8 continues the theme with scansorial or tree climbing birds Chapter 9 claims that obliterative shading pure and simple is the rule among the Shore Birds such as sandpipers and curlew Chapter 10 describes the background picturing of bitterns birds which live in reedbeds where The light stripes on the bill were repeated and continued by the light stripes on the sides of the head and neck and together they imitated very closely the look of separate bright reed stems while the dark stripes pictured reeds in shadow or the shadowed interstices between the stems Thayer P 4 Chapter 11 argues in a way that was heavily criticised when the book appeared see below that water birds some of them highly conspicuous like the jacana and notoriously the male wood duck are colored for camouflage The beautifully contrasted black and white bars on the flanks of the Wood Duck Aix sponsa are ripple pictures and as potent as camouflage in their place as the most elaborate markings of land birds P 5 Chapter 12 argues that the pure white of ocean birds such as gulls and terns equally functions as camouflage Thayer admits that these often appear conspicuous but argues that against varied backgrounds white offers the greatest average inconspicuousness against the ocean his italics or against the bright sky when seen from below Chapter 13 analyses markings and patterns in detail starting with a color plate that shows the effect of disruptive patterning which Thayer calls strong secant and ruptive patterns Using a photograph of an oystercatcher at its nest by Cherry and Richard Kearton Thayer argues that the boldly marked bird mainly black above white below with red beak is both countershaded and ruptively patterned Chapter 14 discusses the barred markings of hawks and owls with further fine plates of photographs by the Keartons of disruptively patterned waders and their cryptic chicks The ringed plover is described as having eye masking and obliterative shadow and hole picturing pattern Chapter 15 describes the leg feather patterns of hawks asserting that these pantaloons mask these dangerous talons to facilitate attack just as their beaks like the beaks of wading birds are masked paradoxically with gaudy colors Chapter 16 controversially claims that the iridescent colours of for example the speculum wing patch of the mallard and other ducks is obliterative the brightly changeable plumage serving to camouflage the wearer in varying conditions Thayer asserts that such brightly colored species as the European kingfisher and the purple gallinule are camouflaged Iridescence should perhaps be considered second only to obliterative counter shading as a factor in the disguisement of birds its universality attests its value Thayer P 6 Chapter 17 argues that bird plumage has many devices to conceal the animals outlines Even the enormously developed feather appendages of the birds of paradise are argued to provide camouflage in this way Sexual display is mentioned but dismissed as not being the sole reason for the colours outlines and patterns of the male birds Chapter 18 briefly discusses mimicry before returning to the evident paramount importance of the obliterative function this time of the brilliant flowerlike heads of hummingbirds The one case that Thayer admits is mimetic is the goatsucker of Trinidad a plant mimic that perches by day and night on a tree stump or branch where the purpose of the mimicry is crypsis Chapter 19 concludes the description of bird plumage claiming that birds from the tropical forests to the snowy north including woodpeckers and the blue jay are all colored for inconspicuousness Chapters 20 21 and 22 discuss the disguising coloration of mammals including the whales which are equipped with a full obliterative shading of surface colors The bats are admitted to have very little in the way of countershading unlike all other families in the order Thayer notes that a few species with strong defences 6 such as hedgehogs porcupines echidnas pangolins and some armadillos are exceptions along with some beasts which enjoy a like security by virtue of their gigantic bigness including the elephants rhinoceroses and hippopotamuses The domestic hare is shown to be strongly countershaded with a pair of photographs from life one sitting and one laid on its back outdoors so that the obliterative shading is reversed Chapter 21 asserts that zebras must be extraordinarily inconspicuous against vegetation a claim derided by Theodore Roosevelt see below Chapter 22 addresses the problem of the few beasts whose bold clear patterns seem to defy that foremost obliterative law These include the skunks the African zoril striped polecat and the teledu stink badger of Java which all have dark underparts and white upperparts Thayer dismisses the aposematism of these species instead asserting the effectiveness of their camouflage Skunks teledus and the rest long believed by naturalists to be colored for warning conspicuousness proclaimant of their foul defensive equipment have in fact the universal obliterative coloration Thayer P 7 nbsp Copperhead Snake full page card cutout to fit over the painting of the same snake among leaves nbsp Copperhead Snake among Leaves painting showing effective disruptive patternSeveral photographs using stuffed skins of skunks attempt to prove the point The chapter goes on to claim that roseate spoonbills flamingoes and prongbuck are all obliteratively colored The raccoon s head resembles the end of a hollow stump or log while its tail is said to be distractive the strong banding serving like an eyespot to divert the attention of a predator to the tail rather than the head while the animal dives down a hole But Thayer is unable to resist arguing that when quiet their tail bands act obliteratively Chapter 23 looks at fish admitting frankly that the authors know next to nothing about fishes from the standpoint of systematic science but saying that they have gathered a trustworthy general estimate of their disguising coloration from market stalls museums and books Many fish are countershaded The bioluminescence of some deep sea fish and other animals is seen as a problem as it is not obliterative the possibility of counterillumination camouflage is not considered Chapter 24 considers the reptiles and amphibians These are noted to be predominantly green often with ruptive patterns Plate 11 treats a Copperhead snake on dead leaves the caption explaining that This is a bona fide study of a Copperhead Snake among dead leaves its normal situation There is a full page sheet of card cut out in the shape of the snake lying on a bed of leaves When this is folded back a painting by Rockwell Kent and Abbott Thayer Also G H Thayer and E B Thayer is revealed showing the snake s outline powerfully disrupted by its zigzag pattern among the light and shade of the leaf litter nbsp Larger spotted beech leaf edge caterpillar both on leaf and detached the other way up revealing strong countershadingChapter 24 mentions that some terrestrial salamanders are rather brightly pied with black and whitish or yellow while other amphibians are extremely gaudy wearing much bright blue green purple and sometimes red It suggests that some of these markings are baits or targets again to distract predators from striking at the head while the salamander markings are left as a problem as the authors know too little about the habits of these species It is admitted that the disguising coloration of many of them is very obscure The final chapters 25 26 and 27 turn to the insects Chapter 25 looks at caterpillars with as Poulton had earlier noted convincing examples of countershading Plate 13 shows caterpillars including the larger spotted beech leaf edge caterpillar both in position passing for a part of the leaf on which it is feeding strongly cryptic and flattened like a slightly browning leaf and inverted when its countershading makes it appear conspicuously solid Chapter 26 looks at other insects and spiders noting the famous leaf mimicking Kallima inachus 7 butterfly of India but again claiming that even conspicuous butterflies are in fact obliterative Eye spots are mentioned but instead of noting that these might be distractive they are asserted to be dazzling appearing as holes and thus functioning as disruptive camouflage The text ends with a paragraph that asks if it is any wonder that artists should feel keen delight in looking at the disguising patterns worn by animals These are triumphs of art where the student can find in epitome painted and perfected by Nature herself the typical color and pattern scheme of each kind of landscape Color and pattern line and shading all are true beyond the power of man to imitate or even fully to discern Thayer P 8 An appendix provides extracts from a very remarkable addition to our subject Poulton s 1907 observations of color change in chameleons Reception editContemporary reviews edit Theodore Roosevelt edit The Thayers views were vigorously criticised in 1911 by Theodore Roosevelt an experienced big game hunter 8 and naturalist familiar with animal camouflage as well as a politician in a lengthy article in the Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 5 9 Roosevelt begins by writing that the Thayers expounded the doctrine of concealing coloration in its extreme form which he thought had been pushed to such a fantastic extreme and to include such wild absurdities as to call for the application of common sense thereto Then to show the sweeping claims made Roosevelt quotes verbatim eight passages from the book one after the other 500 words in all the last one being All patterns and colors whatsoever of all animals that ever prey or are preyed upon are under certain normal circumstances obliterative 10 nbsp Abbott Thayer and Richard Meryman painted Peacock in the Woods for Thayer s 1909 book The image wrongly suggests that even the male bird s brilliant plumage functions as camouflage He then observes that the Thayers claims both in pictures and in writing are not so much arguments as plain misstatements of facts or wild guesses put forward as facts He puts these down to enthusiasm rather than dishonesty and as an example critiques the picture the book s frontispiece of the peacock in a tree 11 with the blue sky showing through the leaves in just sufficient quantity here and there to warrant the author artists explaining that the wonderful blue hues of the peacock s neck are obliterative because they make it fade into the sky 11 This Roosevelt writes would be an extremely rare sight in nature Worse the female the peahen would he argues be conspicuous in those conditions The Thayers have chosen a blue sky to argue that the peacock is camouflaged but then they choose a white sky to allow the prongbuck s white rump to fade into that background This Roosevelt argues is so dishonest that an engineer who constructed a report in that way would at once be dismissed and the directors of a corporation who tried to float shares on the strength of such a report would be liable to prosecution for fraud 11 Roosevelt had recently returned from his African safari having seen admired and shot large numbers of animals 12 He was scornful of Thayer s theories which he described as phantasmagoria and the writer as a well meaning and ill balanced enthusiast Thayer s suggestion that the white markings on the body of the harnessed bush buck are meant to resemble flecks of water shine is dismissed as wild with the observation from personal experience that bush buck spend little time in watery places while the situtunga or lechwe which lack the spots spend more 13 Roosevelt does not refrain from harshness he describes the camouflaged flamingo theory as probably the wildest of all the wild absurdities to which Mr Thayer has committed himself 14 The Auk edit nbsp In Roseate Spoonbills 1905 1909 Thayer tried to show that even the bright pink of these conspicuous birds had a cryptic function nbsp Male Wood Duck in a Forest Pool painted by Thayer for the book to argue that the male duck s conspicuous plumage was disruptively patterned rather than sexual dimorphism Thayer was also roundly criticised in 1911 by herpetologist Thomas Barbour and conservation pioneer John C Phillips 15 in The Auk where they wrote that 16 Mr Thayer however along with most other enthusiasts in a field with which they can be but partially familiar has gone too far and claimed too much Barbour and Phillips 16 Barbour and Phillips warmly welcome Thayer s work on countershading which he has so excellently demonstrated they protest gently against his slightly patronizing treatment of the camouflage of birds like woodcock and grouse which has been known and recognized since ornithology began and go on to the attack on his claims for the flamingo 16 Flamingoes hardly need this carefully arranged protection that is of value but a few minutes each day and to be sure we see the curious cloud arrangement depicted on but very few days of the year if ever Barbour and Phillips 16 They are equally critical of his roseate spoonbill observing that the painting looks nothing like actual skins of the species As for the wood duck they point out its sexual dimorphism of plumage and that the male spends the summer in eclipse plumage while he is 16 most brilliant during the late autumn winter and early spring when their surroundings are of a dead and monotonous color Hence if we attributed any protective importance to such color patterns we should be inclined to consider this of distinct disadvantage Barbour and Phillips 16 Barbour and Phillips note that Thayer in his enthusiasm has ignored or glossed over sexual dimorphism with an artistic haze They also question whether every animal needs protection By skilful jugglings we are shown how anything and everything may be rendered inconspicuous citing the skunk among other boldly black and white animals with both the skunk coloration and the well known skunk smell They conclude by writing that they have purposely omitted calling special attention to the strong features of the book and that they have no axe to grind 16 The Making of Species edit The English ornithologists Douglas Dewar and Frank Finn write in their 1909 book The Making of Species that Thayer seems to be of opinion that all animals are cryptically or as he calls it concealingly or obliteratively coloured They note that Edward Bagnall Poulton had written approvingly of Thayer and that Thayer had asserted that almost all animals were countershaded They agree that countershading exists but to his suggestion that it is universal we feel sorely tempted to poke fun at him and promptly ask any reader who agrees with Thayer that every animal is countershaded to look at a flock of rooks at sunset 17 They admit that camouflage is in general advantageous but point out that the different plumages of seasonally and sexually dimorphic birds cannot all be explained as camouflage considering the conspicuous colours of the male birds Now if it be a matter of life and death importance to a bird to be protectively coloured we should expect the showily coloured cock birds to be far less numerous than the dull plumaged hens but cock birds appear to be as least as numerous as the hens Nor can it be said that this is due to their more secretive habits Dewar and Finn 18 They counter the further argument that hens may be in more danger than cocks through sitting on nests by observing that in many dimorphic species the showy cock shares the work of incubating the eggs 18 Modern assessment edit Hugh Cott edit nbsp Thayer straining the theory to a fantastic extreme 19 White Flamingoes Red Flamingoes and The Skies They Simulate dawn or dusk painted for the book by Abbott ThayerThe zoologist and camouflage expert Hugh Cott in his 1940 book Adaptive Coloration in Animals writes that The theory of concealing coloration has been brought to some discredit through the tendency of certain writers to be carried away from the facts by their own enthusiasm and they have brought down storms of criticism which are sometimes misdirected against the theory itself Thus we find Thayer straining the theory to a fantastic extreme in an endeavour to make it cover almost every type of coloration in the animal kingdom Hugh Cott 19 Cott attacks Thayer s comprehensive assertion that all patterns and colors whatsoever are obliterative 19 and continues more specifically with a detailed rebuttal of both the text and Thayer s contrived paintings Unfortunately certain of Thayer s explanations and illustrations misrepresent nature and are deceptive because they depend upon observations made under abnormal circumstances Hugh Cott 19 Cott then gives the examples of the peacock in the woods with the blue sky behind the neck the flock of red Flamingoes matching a red sunset sky 20 and the roseate spoonbill whose pink plumage matches a pink cloud scheme 20 He then lists the cases of the white flamingo the skunk and the white rump of the prongbuck quoting Roosevelt The raven s coloration is of course concealing if it is put into a coal scuttle 20 notes How unreasonable are extreme views like that adopted by Thayer 20 and admits that criticisms of certain of Thayer s conclusions 20 are justified before returning to the attack on those critics robustly defending the theory of protective and aggressive resemblance 20 More favourably Cott explicitly recognises Thayer s work on countershading though granting Edward Bagnall Poulton s partial anticipation with his work on the chrysalis of the purple emperor butterfly Further Cott quotes Thayer s description of countershading and Cott s Figure 1 of countershaded fish is captioned Diagrams illustrating Thayer s principle of obliterative shading 21 Implicitly also Cott follows Thayer in his Figure 3 Larva of Eyed Hawk moth 21 in both natural e g up side down 21 and unnatural 21 positions in his Figure 5 drawing of the disruptive effect of the stripes and bold markings of woodcock chicks like Thayer s Figure 81 in his Plate 7 with just like Thayer s Figure 7 a photograph of a white cock against a white background in his Figure 18 and front cover drawings of a copperhead snake lying on a bed of leaves with and without its disruptive pattern like Thayer s Plate 11 and so on 21 John Endler and Peter Forbes edit The evolutionary biologist John Endler reviewing the topic of camouflage in Proceedings of the Royal Society B in 2006 cites Thayer s 1909 book three times for disruption with conspicuous elements which distract the predator s attention and break up the body outline making detection of the prey difficult 22 for masquerade where the prey is detected as distinct from the visual background but not recognized as edible for example by resembling a leaf 22 and for countershading where False gradients are common in animal colour patterns leading to misleading appearance of shape even when they do not disrupt the body outline 22 Thayer is by far the earliest source used by Endler the only other early source he cites for disruption is Hugh Cott s 1940 Adaptive Coloration in Animals 23 The art and science writer Peter Forbes notes that Thayer became obsessed by the flattening effect of countershading and that far from being a scientist he was an artist whose idealist fervour edged by deep insecurity led him to regard his findings less as discovery than as revelation 22 Describing Concealing Coloration as a magnum opus 22 Forbes writes that by 1909 Thayer s prophetic intolerance was in full flood 22 that he was overcompensating for his need for approval of his artwork and that he failed to see that acceptance of ideas in science does not depend on the vehemence with which they are expressed 22 In Forbes s view Thayer was battling for the rights of artists over scientists citing Thayer it properly belongs to the realm of pictorial art 22 in evidence Apart from Thayer s bizarre 22 flamingos Forbes calls Thayer s opposition to Batesian mimicry extreme 22 For Forbes Reading Thayer s book today is a strange experience He sets out with the idea that every single creature is perfectly camouflaged 22 and then tries to bludgeon his readers 22 into agreeing Forbes is critical of Thayer s rejection of warning coloration quoting Thayer s daughter Gladys as writing My father s special mission was tasting butterflies 22 Thayer apparently wanted to prove that mimicry was the wrong explanation as both model and mimic tasted the same Forbes observes that natural selection did not have to contend with human reactions to the taste of butterflies 22 David Rothenberg edit The philosopher and jazz musician David Rothenberg in his 2012 book Survival of the Beautiful on the relationship between aesthetics and evolution 24 argues that while the Thayers book set out the principles of camouflage From observation of nature art contributed to the military needs of society Thayer following Charles Darwin was swept up in the idea that every animal had evolved to perfectly live in its surroundings but was emotionally unable to accept the other half of Darwin s view of animal coloration 25 Thayer was quite troubled by Darwin s whole notion of sexual selection to explain the evolution of taste and beauty On the contrary all animal patterning can be explained by the need to remain hidden Even what appears garish including the tail of the peacock is in fact a sophisticated form of camouflage that can dupe even such a great scientist as Charles Darwin David Rothenberg 25 Rothenberg then discusses the Thayers account of the wood duck which Rothenberg calls our most garishly colored duck He explains that the Thayers believed they trained as artists had seen what earlier observers had missed 26 The black and white patches and stripes are ripple pictures depicting motion and reflections in the water all ingeniously evolved to hide the bird not by inconspicuousness but by disruptive conspicuousness David Rothenberg 26 Smithsonian American Art Museum edit The Smithsonian American Art Museum s website describing the Thayers book as controversial writes sceptically that 27 Even bright pink flamingoes would vanish against a similar colored sky at sunset or sunrise No matter that at times their brilliant feathers were highly visible their coloration would protect them from predators at crucial moments so that the spectator seems to see right through the space occupied by an opaque animal Not all readers were convinced Smithsonian Art Museum 27 References editPrimary edit a b c Thayer 1909 p viii Thayer 1909 p ix Thayer 1909 p 46 Thayer 1909 p 57 Thayer 1909 p 62 Thayer 1909 p 95 Thayer 1909 p 148 Thayer 1909 p 240 Secondary edit a b c d e Meryman 1999 Poulton 1890 a b Forbes 2009 p 74 Forbes 2009 pp 73 84 a b Wright Patrick 23 June 2005 Cubist Slugs Review of DPM Disruptive Pattern Material An Encyclopedia of Camouflage Nature Military Culture by Roy Behrens London Review of Books 27 12 16 20 Many of these species also have deimatic displays deliberately making themselves conspicuous It is spelled inachis in the text Hunting in Many Lands The Book of the Boone and Crockett Club 1895 Roosevelt Theodore Editor Roosevelt Theodore 1911 Revealing and concealing coloration in birds and mammals Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 30 Article 8 119 231 hdl 2246 470 Roosevelt 1911 pp 121 122 a b c Roosevelt 1911 pp 123 124 Rothenburg 2011 p 137 Roosevelt 1911 p 194 Roosevelt 1911 p 228 Coolidge Harold September 1963 Notes on Dr John C Phillips PDF IUCN Archived from the original PDF on October 5 2012 Retrieved December 7 2012 a b c d e f g Barbour Thomas Phillips John C April 1911 Concealing Coloration Again The Auk 28 2 179 188 doi 10 2307 4071434 JSTOR 4071434 Dewar amp Finn 1909 pp 184 187 a b Dewar amp Finn 1909 pp 201 202 a b c d Cott 1940 p 172 a b c d e f Cott 1940 p 173 a b c d e Cott 1940 pp36 37 facing p48 and pp66 67 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Forbes 2009 pp 76 79 Endler John A October 2006 Disruptive and cryptic coloration Proceedings of the Royal Society B 273 1600 2425 2426 doi 10 1098 rspb 2006 3650 PMC 1634903 PMID 16959630 Forbes Peter February 10 2012 The Guardian Survival of the Beautiful by David Rothenberg review Retrieved December 7 2012 a b Rothenberg 2011 pp 132 133 a b Rothenberg 2011 p 134 a b Search Collections Male Wood Duck in a Forest Pool study for book Concealing Coloration in the Animal Kingdom Smithsonian American Art Museum Retrieved December 7 2012 Bibliography editCott Hugh Adaptive Coloration in Animals Oxford London and New York 1940 Dewar Douglas Finn Frank The making of species John Lane The Bodley Head London and New York 1909 Forbes Peter Dazzled and Deceived Mimicry and Camouflage Yale 2009 ISBN 0 300 12539 9 Gephart Emily Hidden Talents The Camouflage Paintings of Abbot Handerson Thayer Cabinet Magazine Issue 4 Animals Fall 2001 Meryman Richard A Painter of Angels Became the Father of Camouflage Archived 2013 10 30 at the Wayback Machine Smithsonian Magazine April 1999 Poulton Edward B The Colours of Animals Kegan Paul Trench amp Trubner London 1890 Rothenberg David Survival of the Beautiful Art Science and Evolution Bloomsbury London 2011 Thayer Gerald H Thayer Abbott H Concealing Coloration in the Animal Kingdom An Exposition of the Laws of Disguise Through Color and Pattern Being a Summary of Abbott H Thayer s Disclosures Macmillan New York 1909 External links editSmithsonian American Art Museum Blue Jays in Winter Ohio State University The Camouflage Project Abbott H Thayer Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Concealing Coloration in the Animal Kingdom amp oldid 1199141011, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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