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Hawkmoths can still see colors at night. (Zoology).


For the first time, scientists have detailed evidence that an animal can see color by starlight star·light  
n.
The light from the stars.


starlight
Noun

the light that comes from the stars

Noun 1.
. People lose color discrimination in such dimness, but hawkmoths aced tests of color not of the white race; - commonly meaning, esp. in the United States, of negro blood, pure or mixed.

See also: Color
 recognition at night.

Some older studies suggested that goldfish and a different moth see colors in dim light, but Almut Kelber of Lund University Lund University has 7 faculties, with additional campuses in the cities of Malmö and Helsingborg, with a total of over 42,500 people studying in 50 different programmes and 800 separate courses.  in Sweden and his colleagues focused on the Deilephila elpenor The Elephant Hawk-moth (Deilephila elpenor) is a large moth of the Sphingidae family. Range
The species is found throughout Britain and Ireland except for the north and east of Scotland, and its range extends across Europe, Russia, and into China, northern
 hawkmoth, which collects nectar during the darkest hours of the night in Europe.

The researchers trained moths to associate sugar-water with either yellow or blue artificial flowers. When offered an array of colored and gray choices, moths settled on the color they'd been trained to seek. Even as the researchers dimmed the light from dusk to starlight, moths still picked the right color most of the time, the investigators report in the Oct. 31 Nature.

To see whether the moths had managed their feat just by exquisite sensitivity to shades of Noun 1. shades of - something that reminds you of someone or something; "aren't there shades of 1948 here?"
reminder - an experience that causes you to remember something
 darkness and lightness, the researchers offered a wider selection of flowers, including a darker and a lighter version of the target color. The moths rarely investigated flowers in the completely wrong hue--a sign of recognition of the hue itself--but did show interest in the alternative versions of their treat-associated color.

Moths even can compensate for shifts in the color of illumination, the researchers say. Moths trained to select green artificial flowers managed to alight on them even when yellow light made a turquoise decoy DECOY. A pond used for the breeding and maintenance of water-fowl. 11 Mod. 74, 130; S. C. 3 Salk. 9; Holt, 14 11 East, 571.  appear, at least to a human eye, to be green, as well.
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Article Details
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Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:4EUSW
Date:Nov 30, 2002
Words:250
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