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Gaze at the vivid yellows, blues, and psychedelic swirls of a single emperor angelfish and you'll sense the whimsy of evolution. Go on to explore its home in lush coral reefs and you'll soon hit sensory overload, assaulted by colors and patterns that range from sublime to garish. Coral reefs are unquestionably the world's most colorful places. But why?
瞧瞧那“皇帝神仙鱼”(emperor angelfish)身上鲜艳的黄与蓝,还有迷幻般的漩涡,你就能感受到生物进化的无奇不有了。继续走进它所栖息的繁茂的珊瑚礁,你会马上觉得感官超出负荷:由庄重到花俏的各式各样色彩与图案从四面围攻而来。珊瑚礁无疑是世上色彩最丰富的地方,但为什么会这样?
For reasons known only to nature, color explodes across coral reefs, making them Earth's most vivid landscapes. Here in the shallows of a Fijian reef, brilliant soft corals wave in reds, pinks, and yellows as schools of fairy basslets flash orange and violet hues. The basslets' different colors aid in species identification, mate recognition, and even camouflage as individuals mass against the kaleidoscope of the reef. What humans see lighted by a photographer's bright strobe may look altogether different in natural light through the eyes of reef creatures. Scientists are now beginning to learn how wavelengths of light (and therefore color) change through water at different distances, and—more important—how fish see colors and what messages they might communicate.
出于只有大自然才明白的理由,色彩在珊瑚礁各处蓬发,让它们成为地球上最明艳的景观。此处是斐济一处珊瑚礁的浅滩,艳丽的软珊瑚舞动在红色、粉红色与黄色之中,而成群的拟花鮨(fairy basslet)则闪耀着橘色和紫色的光辉。拟花鮨不同的颜色,有助于种群分辨和配偶识别。甚至当它们聚集在万花筒般的珊瑚礁旁时,还能作为的保护色。人类透过摄影师的闪光灯所见到的,可能跟珊瑚礁生物的眼睛透过自然光所见完全不同。科学家现在开始了解,光的波长(也就是颜色)在穿透水中时,在不同距离如何改变,而──更重要的是──鱼类如何看到色彩,而它们又可能沟通些什么样的讯息。
Bold horizontal bands of black, white, and yellow pop out on a well-lighted sweetlips (Plectorhinchus polytaenia) in Indonesia. The pattern and colors actually help distort the fish's outline when seen in natural light at a distance through water, helping the animal disappear from the view of potential predators. Nearby, a neon cleaner wrasse also wears stark stripes. These little fish eat parasites off the flesh and mouths of other fish. The wrasse's stripes may signal that it is a useful helper rather than a ready meal. Neon wrasses vary in coloration geographically. A yellow cast near the head (as shown here) indicates an Indonesian species; in Fiji many neon wrasses have a yellow blaze near the tail. |
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