james_davis_nicoll (
james_davis_nicoll) wrote2009-01-08 10:58 am
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I'm not sure this question even makes sense
But why are humans so drab compared to, say, birds? Is it just that mammals in general have lousy color vision (although ours is better than average) and that we're descended from animals that wouldn't have been able to make use of a wide variety of fur colors or is it that there's something about fur and hair that inherently limits its palette?
I will admit this ranks lower on my "inherent human features that require fixing" than the vitamin C thing, particularly given the existance of non-toxic dyes.
I will admit this ranks lower on my "inherent human features that require fixing" than the vitamin C thing, particularly given the existance of non-toxic dyes.
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Speak for yourself, I'm quite dapper. :)
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It's not the rest of mammalia's fault that the WMD of the synapsids can't pick up that great boutique of life correctly.
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Pretty much all through our evolution
Some of the small monkeys are colorful to an extent but they live in the trees. And the king of color, the male Mandrill, is not a small, soft creature.
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We know hair/fur can do red and yellow. Blue fur exists (blue fox, russian blue house cat) though they're blue-grey; I don't know if any bright blue exists, or green (short of sloths and polar bears letting algae grow on them). Don't know if there's any hard limit. Red's better for getting attention and brown's usually better for camouflage.
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This evolved fairly recently.
Mammals spent 120 million years being small, nocturnal, and cryptic; this more or less permanently constrained the choice space for mammalian evolution.
We also use different keratin molecules compared to birds; the colour range may be more restricted.
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Colours
(Anonymous) 2009-01-08 05:02 pm (UTC)(link)- Lars
I'll hazard a guess.
"Predator" here can include other humans.
Re: I'll hazard a guess.
Re: I'll hazard a guess.
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The colors available for fur are more limited than those for feathers, though; blue and green colors in feathers aren't actually due to pigment, but to the barbs of the feathers acting as a diffraction grating. (Green is usually but not always blue from diffration + yellow pigment.) Fur just doesn't have the sort of physical structure that can produce this effect.
I suspect mammals overall more or less run the gamut of available fur colors, and to be honest there aren't many fur colors that aren't represented in natural human hair colors.
You had it right the first time
(Anonymous) 2009-01-08 05:48 pm (UTC)(link)Surprise: if you index out colors for camouflage (leopards and such), only a handful of mammals have colorful displays -- and that group is dominated by, hey, primates.
Birds are tetrachromats, which means all birds have better color vision than any mammal -- us included.
So birds /can/ be drab, but the majority of mammals /must/ be.
Doug M.
Re: You had it right the first time
It'll probably be one of the next evolutionary tweaks. Go positive selection!
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This will end badly.
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Alas
(Anonymous) - 2009-01-09 22:04 (UTC) - Expand(no subject)
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completely irrelevant but heavily armed rodents
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important fixes
sinuses -- these aren't going to fully adapt to a fully upright stance by themselves.
lower back -- adding short ribs and more muscles are probably the way to go for the lumbar vertebrae. Get some cover for the kidneys in the process.
neck -- we have a heavy head and a strange vertical posture; there's probably something better to be done for the cervical vertebrae and the nasty tendency to snap with unexpected accelerations.
That whole unfortunate aging thing, too.
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Did you see the little news blurb about the PINK lizard they found somewhere on the Galapagos Islands?
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I like iguanas. I am not allowed to have one, however, because they are not cats.
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According to Pinker (IIRC), the loquacious and the clever-talking are considered attractive independent of culture, so it's not just an analogy; human language is actually equivalent to birdsong in its demonstration of fitness and desirability.
Humans also have brainware with the dedicated purpose of recognizing and distinguishing faces. It's so dominant that we see faces in everything from car grills to pieces of toast. So, compared to peacocks and macaws, we may not be objectively very display-oriented, but as far as the ability to distinguish and the effort we put into distinguishing go, we are very easy to distinguish.
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http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/health/article1019030.ece
Another piece claimed blonde hair was as recent as 10-11ky.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-378390/Proof-cavemen-preferred-blondes-too.html
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The fact that birds are tetrachromatic in their vision, whereas many mammals are monochromatic, or trichromatic at best, probably also has something to do with it.