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Sea slugs use daylight to show off their colors

Sea slugs use daylight to show off their colours
Credit: Cedric van den Berg

Rather than hiding from predators, the brightest and most patterned sea slugs are active during the day so their colors shine, a University of Queensland study has found.

Researchers from UQ's School of the Environment have completed a comprehensive analysis of sea slug coloration across 45 eastern Australian species. The research was in the Journal of Animal Ecology.

Project lead Dr. Cedric van den Berg said the research showed daylight was critical to enhancing the sea slugs' ability to ward off predators through their visual appearance.

"Sea slugs use bright, contrasting color patterns to send messages to potential predators like 'Don't eat me, I'm poisonous,'" Dr. van den Berg said.

"We simulated how the sea slugs would appear to a predator, using dedicated cameras and software.

"They advertise their underlying defenses such as nasty chemicals or stinging cells with bold visual signals like brightly colored spots, thick stripes and enhanced body outlines.

"These tactics are strongly linked to being active during daytime when there's enough light for these signals to function.

"This has been thought to be necessary for any in nature to evolve, but there is surprisingly little evidence to support that assumption.

"It makes sense for these species to avoid the risky and potentially costly experience of being nibbled on or even ingested by a predator whether they are toxic or not.

"Their bold appearance also educates predators by being distinct from other animals while also increasing the chances of being remembered."

Researchers focused on finding whether there were shared properties of color patterns among sea slug species, which correlate with daytime activity.

More than 10 years of data collection and analysis led to the development of the methods used in the study.

Researchers used sophisticated to combine almost 160 different varieties of color patterns into a single fingerprint, which captures the difference in appearance of diurnal and nocturnal species.

"The satisfying thing is the fingerprint captures color pattern properties we believe are efficient visual signaling tactics, for example, to advertise nasty chemicals," Dr. van den Berg said.

"We can even use the fingerprint to successfully classify the daytime activity of almost 90% of all the species we looked at.

"Nocturnal sea slugs don't need to evolve colors and patterns aimed at signaling to potential predators because predators are unlikely to use vision to hunt at night when senses like touch and smell are more important.

"We hope this work leads to further on the ecology and evolution of defensive animal coloration, particularly for marine ."

More information: Cedric P. van den Berg et al, Diel activity correlates with colour pattern morphology of heterobranch sea slugs, Journal of Animal Ecology (2025).

Journal information: Journal of Animal Ecology

Citation: Sea slugs use daylight to show off their colors (2025, April 17) retrieved 27 June 2025 from /news/2025-04-sea-slugs-daylight.html
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