Iridescent colouration of male Anna's hummingbird (Calypte anna) caused by multilayered barbules.
Marco A GiraldoJuan L ParraDoekele G StavengaPublished in: Journal of comparative physiology. A, Neuroethology, sensory, neural, and behavioral physiology (2018)
The male Anna's hummingbird features a brightly reddish-pink reflecting gorget, due to large stacks of melanosomes in the feather barbules, arranged in layers separated by keratin. Direct observations together with detailed scatterometry demonstrated that the barbules reflect incident light in an approximately specular manner. The structural colouration is iridescent, i.e. varies with a changing angle of light incidence. Spectrophotometrical measurements of the barbule reflectance and absorbance can be well interpreted with calculated spectra obtained with a transfer matrix method for optical multilayers, using anatomical data and measured refractive index spectra. The organization of the reflectors as a Venetian blind presumably functions to create a high spectral contrast of the male's plumage during courtship.