Unlocking The Mysteries Of The Cuttlefish’s Camouflage

Posted: Published on January 30th, 2014

This post was added by Dr P. Richardson

January 29, 2014

[ Watch the Video: What Mechanisms Are Behind Cuttlefish Camouflage? ]

Brett Smith for redOrbit.com Your Universe Online

Capable of producing zebra-like camouflage or hypnotic color oscillations, the skin of the cuttlefish has long fascinated scientists looking to unlock its secrets. Now, a new study from Harvard University has revealed a natural nanoscale photonic device that allows the so-called chameleon of the sea to dynamically change its colors.

Nature solved the riddle of adaptive camouflage a long time ago, said study author Kevin Kit Parker, a professor of bioengineering and applied physics at the Harvard. Now the challenge is to reverse-engineer this system in a cost-efficient, synthetic system that is amenable to mass manufacturing.

By using pigmented organs called chromatophores, the cephalopod can change the look of its skin in response to visual stimuli. Scientists have been unable to understand the biological, chemical, and optical mechanics behind this adaptive coloration.

To change skin color, the cuttlefish uses a system of vertically arranged optical components: the leucophore, a light scatterer that spreads light evenly over the visible spectrum; the iridophore, a reflector made from thin films; and the chromatophore. This layered system allows the cuttlefish skin to selectively absorb or reflect light of different colors, the researchers said.

Chromatophores were previously considered to be pigmentary organs that acted simply as selective color filters, said study author Leila F. Deravi, a research associate in bioengineering at Harvard. But our results suggest that they play a more complex role; they contain luminescent protein nanostructures that enable the cuttlefish to make quick and elaborate changes in its skin pigmentation.

When the cuttlefish changes its skin color, each chromatophore expands changing the surface area of each by as much as 500 percent. In the new study, which was published in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface, researchers revealed that fully-expanded chromatophore has two factors related to maintaining skin color intensity: the presence of certain proteins reflectin and crystallin in pigment granules and pigment layers as thin as three granules that maintain optical effectiveness effectively functioning as nanoscale photonic elements.

The cuttlefish uses an ingenious approach to materials composition and structure, one that we have never employed in our engineered displays, said co-author Evelyn Hu, a professor of applied physics and of electrical engineering at Harvard.

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Unlocking The Mysteries Of The Cuttlefish's Camouflage

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