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'{{good article}} {{short description|Active camouflage using light matched to the background}} [[File:Squid Counterillumination.png|thumb|upright=1.7|Principle of the counter-illumination camouflage of the firefly squid, ''[[Watasenia scintillans]]''. When seen from below by a predator, the animal's light helps to match its brightness and colour to the sea surface above.]] '''Counter-illumination''' is a method of [[active camouflage]] seen in [[marine animal]]s such as [[firefly squid]] and [[midshipman fish]], and in military prototypes, producing light to match their backgrounds in both brightness and wavelength. Marine animals of the [[mesopelagic]] (mid-water) zone tend to appear dark against the bright water surface when seen from below. They can camouflage themselves, often [[anti-predator adaptation|from predators]] but also from their prey, by producing light with [[bioluminescence|bioluminescent]] [[photophore]]s on their downward-facing surfaces, reducing the contrast of their [[silhouette]]s against the background. The light may be produced by the animals themselves, or by [[mutualism (biology)|symbiotic]] [[bacteria]], often ''[[Aliivibrio fischeri]]''. Counter-illumination differs from [[countershading]], which uses only pigments such as [[melanin]] to reduce the appearance of shadows. It is one of the dominant types of [[aquatic camouflage]], along with transparency and [[silvering (camouflage)|silvering]]. All three methods make animals in open water resemble their environment. Counter-illumination has not come into widespread [[military camouflage|military use]], but during the [[Second World War]] it was trialled in [[ship camouflage|ships]] in the Canadian [[diffused lighting camouflage]] project, and in [[aircraft camouflage|aircraft]] in the American [[Yehudi lights]] project. == In marine animals == {{further|Underwater camouflage|List of camouflage methods}} ===Mechanism=== ====Counter-illumination and countershading==== {{further|Underwater camouflage|Countershading}} In the sea, counter-illumination is one of three dominant methods of [[underwater camouflage]], the other two being transparency and silvering.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Herring |first1=Peter |author-link=Peter Herring |year=2002 |title=The Biology of the Deep Ocean |url=https://archive.org/details/biologydeepocean00herr |url-access=limited |location=Oxford |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=9780198549567 |pages=[https://archive.org/details/biologydeepocean00herr/page/n200 191]–195}}</ref> Among marine animals, especially [[crustacean]]s, [[cephalopod]]s, and [[fish]], counter-illumination [[camouflage]] occurs where [[bioluminescent]] light from [[photophore]]s on an [[organism]]'s ventral surface is matched to the light radiating from the environment.<ref name=JohnsenWidder2004>{{cite journal | last1=Johnsen | first1=Sönke | last2=Widder | first2=Edith A. | last3=Mobley | first3=Curtis D. | title=Propagation and Perception of Bioluminescence: Factors Affecting Counterillumination as a Cryptic Strategy | journal=The Biological Bulletin | volume=207 | issue=1 | year=2004 | pages=1–16 | issn=0006-3185 | doi=10.2307/1543624| pmid=15315939 | jstor=1543624 | s2cid=9048248 | url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/part/33120 }}</ref> The [[bioluminescence]] is used to obscure the organism's silhouette produced by the down-welling light. Counter-illumination differs from [[countershading]], also used by many marine animals, which uses pigments to darken the upper side of the body while the underside is as light as possible with pigment, namely white. Countershading fails when the light falling on the animal's underside is too weak to make it appear roughly as bright as the background. This commonly occurs when the background is the relatively bright ocean surface, and the animal is swimming in the [[mesopelagic]] depths of the sea. Counter-illumination goes further than countershading, actually brightening the underside of the body.<ref name=Young1977>{{cite journal |author1=Young, R.E,. |author2=Roper, C.F.E. | year=1977 | title=Intensity Regulation of Bioluminescence during Countershading in Living midwater animals | journal=Science | volume=191 | issue=4231 | pages=1046–1048 | doi=10.1126/science.1251214|pmid=1251214 |bibcode=1976Sci...191.1046Y }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | last=Rowland | first=Hannah M. | jstor=40485817 | title=Abbott Thayer to the present day: what have we learned about the function of countershading? | journal=[[Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B]] | year=2009 | volume=364 | issue=1516 | pages=519–527 | doi=10.1098/rstb.2008.0261 | pmid=19000972 | pmc=2674085}}</ref> ====Photophores==== {{main|Photophore}} [[File:Hygophum hygomii Photophores.jpg|thumb|left|upright=1.2<!--ratio for low image-->|[[Photophore]]s on a [[lanternfish]], the most common deep sea fish worldwide]] Counter-illumination relies on organs that produce light, photophores. These are roughly spherical<!--source says "glandular"--> structures that appear as [[luminescence|luminous]] spots on many marine animals, including fish and cephalopods. The organ can be simple, or as complex as the human eye, equipped with lenses, shutters, colour filters and reflectors.<ref name=TOL>{{cite web |url=http://tolweb.org/accessory/Cephalopod_Photophore_Terminology?acc_id=2015 |title=Cephalopod Photophore Terminology |publisher=Tolweb.org |access-date=16 October 2017 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170820160605/http://tolweb.org/accessory/Cephalopod_Photophore_Terminology?acc_id=2015 |archive-date=20 August 2017 }}</ref> [[File:Bobtail Squid Light Organ.svg|thumb|[[Sagittal section]] of the large eye-like light-producing organ of Hawaiian bobtail squid, ''[[Euprymna scolopes]]''. The organ houses symbiotic ''[[Aliivibrio fischeri]]'' bacteria.]] In the [[Hawaiian bobtail squid]] (''Euprymna scolopes'') light is produced in a large and complex two-lobed light organ inside the squid's mantle cavity. At the top of the organ (dorsal side) is a reflector, directing the light downwards. Below this are containers (crypts) lined with [[epithelium]] containing light-producing symbiotic bacteria. Below those is a kind of [[iris (eye)|iris]], consisting of branches (diverticula) of its [[ink sac]]; and below that is a lens. Both the reflector and the lens are derived from [[mesoderm]]. Light escapes from the organ downwards, some of it travelling directly, some coming off the reflector. Some 95% of the light-producing bacteria are voided at dawn every morning; the population in the light organ then builds up slowly during the day to a maximum of some 10<sup>12</sup> bacteria by nightfall: this species hides in sand away from predators during the day, and does not attempt counter-illumination during daylight, which would in any case require much brighter light than its light organ output. The emitted light shines through the skin of the squid's underside. To reduce light production, the squid can change the shape of its iris; it can also adjust the strength of yellow filters on its underside, which presumably change the balance of wavelengths emitted. The light production is correlated with the intensity of down-welling light but about one third as bright; the squid is able to track repeated changes in brightness.<ref name=Jones2004/> ====Matching light intensity and wavelength==== At night, nocturnal organisms match both the [[wavelength]] and the [[Brightness|light intensity]] of their bioluminescence to that of the down-welling moonlight and direct it downward as they swim, to help them remain unnoticed by any observers below.<ref name=Jones2004/><ref name=Guerrero-Ferreira2009>{{cite journal | author1=Guerrero-Ferreira, R. C. | author2=Nishiguchi, M. K. | year=2009 | title=Ultrastructure of light organs of loliginid squids and their bacterial symbionts: a novel model system for the study of marine symbioses | journal=Vie et Milieu | volume=59 | issue=3–4 | pages=307–313 | pmid=21152248 | pmc=2998345 | issn=0240-8759}}</ref> [[File:Linear visible spectrum.svg|thumb|upright=2.0|Spectrum of [[visible light]] showing colours at different [[wavelength]]s, in [[nanometre]]s]] In the [[eyeflash squid]] (''Abralia veranyi'') a species which [[diel vertical migration|daily migrates between the surface and deep waters]], a study showed that the light produced is bluer in cold waters and greener in warmer waters, temperature serving as a guide to the required [[emission spectrum]]. The animal has more than 550 photophores on its underside, consisting of rows of four to six large photophores running across the body, and many smaller photophores scattered over the surface. In cold water at 11 Celsius, the squid's photophores produced a simple (unimodal) spectrum with its peak at 490 nanometres (blue-green). In warmer water at 24 Celsius, the squid added a weaker emission (forming a shoulder on the side of the main peak) at around 440 nanometres (blue), from the same group of photophores. Other groups remained unilluminated: other species, and perhaps ''A. veranyi'' from its other groups of photophores, can produce a third spectral component when needed. Another squid, ''[[Abralia trigonura]]'', is able to produce three spectral components: at 440 and at 536 nanometres (green), appearing at 25 Celsius, apparently from the same photophores; and at 470–480 nanometres (blue-green), easily the strongest component at 6 Celsius, apparently from a different group of photophores. Many species can in addition vary the light they emit by passing it through a choice of colour filters.<ref name=HerringWidder1992>{{cite journal | last1=Herring | first1=P. J. |author-link=Peter Herring | last2=Widder | first2=E. A. | last3=Haddock | first3=S. H. D. |author3-link=Steven Haddock | title=Correlation of bioluminescence emissions with ventral photophores in the mesopelagic squidAbralia veranyi (Cephalopoda: Enoploteuthidae) | journal=Marine Biology | volume=112 | issue=2 | year=1992 | pages=293–298 | issn=0025-3162 | doi=10.1007/BF00702474| bibcode=1992MarBi.112..293H | s2cid=4661478 }}</ref> Counterillumination camouflage halved predation among individuals employing it compared to those not employing it in the [[midshipman fish]] ''[[Porichthys notatus]]''.<ref name=Jones2004/><ref name=HarperCase1999>{{cite journal | last1=Harper | first1=R. | last2=Case | first2=J. | title=Disruptive counterillumination and its anti-predatory value in the plainfish midshipman Porichthys notatus | journal=Marine Biology | date=1999 | volume=134 | issue=3 | pages=529–540 | doi=10.1007/s002270050568 | bibcode=1999MarBi.134..529H | s2cid=85386749 }}</ref> [[File:Cephalopod photophore structu.svg|thumb|Diagram of a small type of [[photophore]] in the skin of a [[cephalopod]], ''[[Abralia trigonura]]'', in vertical section]] ====Autogenic or bacteriogenic bioluminescence==== {{further|Bioluminescence}} The bioluminescence used for counter-illumination can be either [[wikt:autogenic|autogenic]] (produced by the animal itself, as in [[pelagic]] cephalopods such as ''[[Vampyroteuthis]]'', ''[[Stauroteuthis]]'', and pelagic octopuses in the [[Bolitaenidae]]<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Lindgren |first1=Annie R. |last2=Pankey |first2=Molly S. |last3=Hochberg |first3=Frederick G. |last4=Oakley |first4=Todd H. |title=A multi-gene phylogeny of Cephalopoda supports convergent morphological evolution in association with multiple habitat shifts in the marine environment |journal=BMC Evolutionary Biology |date=2012 |volume=12 |issue=1 |page=129 |doi=10.1186/1471-2148-12-129 |pmc=3733422 |pmid=22839506 |doi-access=free |bibcode=2012BMCEE..12..129L }}</ref>) or bacteriogenic (produced by [[bacteria]]l [[Symbiosis|symbionts]]). The luminescent bacterium is often ''[[Aliivibrio fischeri]]'', as for example in the Hawaiian bobtail squid.<ref name=Jones2004/> ===Purpose=== [[File:Porichthys plectrodon photophores.jpg|thumb|upright|Photophores on a nocturnal [[midshipman fish]], whose bioluminescence halves its rate of predation<ref name=Jones2004/>]] ====Hiding from predators==== Reducing the silhouette is primarily an [[Antipredator adaptation|anti-predator defence]] for mesopelagic (mid-water) organisms. The reduction of the silhouette from highly directional down-welling light is important, since there is no refuge in the open water, and [[predation]] occurs from below.<ref name=Young1977/><ref name=YoungRoper1976>Young. R. E; Roper. C. F. E. 1976. Bioluminescent countershading in Midwater Animals from living Squid. Science, New Series. Vol 191,4231: 1046-1048.</ref><ref name=BBC2004>{{cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/blueplanet/infobursts/counter_illumination_bg.shtml |title=Science & Nature - Sea Life - Ocean info - Counter-illumination |publisher=BBC |date=2004-03-11 |access-date=2012-10-03}}</ref> Many mesopelagic cephalopods such as the [[firefly squid]] (''Watasenia scintillans''), [[Decapoda|decapod]] crustaceans, and deep ocean fishes use counter-illumination; it works best for them when ambient light levels are low, leaving the diffuse down-welling light from above as the only light source.<ref name=Jones2004>{{cite journal |author1=Jones, B. W. |author2=Nishiguchi, M. K. |year=2004 |title=Counterillumination in the Hawaiian bobtail squid, ''Euprymna scolopes'' Berry (Mollusca : Cephalopoda) |journal=[[Marine Biology (journal)|Marine Biology]] |volume=144 |issue=6 |pages=1151–1155 |doi=10.1007/s00227-003-1285-3 |bibcode=2004MarBi.144.1151J |s2cid=86576334 |url=http://www.medmicro.wisc.edu/labs/mcfall_ruby_papers/pdf/2004/Jones_Nishiguchi_2004_Biol.pdf |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100611082606/http://www.medmicro.wisc.edu/labs/mcfall_ruby_papers/pdf/2004/Jones_Nishiguchi_2004_Biol.pdf |archive-date=11 June 2010}}</ref><ref name=Young1977/> Some deep water sharks, including ''[[Dalatias licha]]'', ''[[Etmopterus lucifer]]'', and ''[[Etmopterus granulosus]]'', are bioluminescent, most likely for camouflage from predators that attack from beneath.<ref name="Mallefet Stevens Duchatelet 2021">{{cite journal | last1=Mallefet | first1=Jérôme | last2=Stevens | first2=Darren W. | last3=Duchatelet | first3=Laurent | title=Bioluminescence of the Largest Luminous Vertebrate, the Kitefin Shark, Dalatias licha: First Insights and Comparative Aspects | journal=Frontiers in Marine Science | publisher=Frontiers Media SA | volume=8 | date=26 February 2021 | issn=2296-7745 | doi=10.3389/fmars.2021.633582| doi-access=free }}</ref> ====Hiding from prey==== Besides its effectiveness as a predator avoidance mechanism, counter-illumination also serves as an essential tool to predators themselves. Some shark species, such as the deepwater [[velvet belly lanternshark]] (''Etmopterus spinax''), use counter-illumination to remain hidden from their prey.<ref>{{cite journal |author1=Claes, Julien M. |author2=Aksnes, Dag L. |author3=Mallefet, Jérôme |year=2010 |title=Phantom hunter of the fjords: camouflage by counterillumination in a shark (''Etmopterus spinax'') |journal=Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology |volume=388 |issue=1–2 |pages=28–32 |doi=10.1016/j.jembe.2010.03.009 |url=http://www.bio.uib.no/modelling/papers/Claes_2010_Phantom_hunter.pdf |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110927154130/http://www.bio.uib.no/modelling/papers/Claes_2010_Phantom_hunter.pdf |archive-date=2011-09-27 |access-date=2010-11-14 }}</ref> Other well-studied examples include the [[cookiecutter shark]] (''Isistius brasiliensis''), the [[marine hatchetfish]], and the Hawaiian bobtail squid.<ref name=Jones2004/> More than 10% of shark species may be bioluminescent, though some such as [[lantern shark]]s may use the light for [[signalling theory|signalling]] as well as for camouflage.<ref>{{cite web | author=Davies, Ella | url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/17812363 | title=Tiny sharks provide glowing clue | publisher=BBC | date=26 April 2012 | access-date=12 February 2013 | url-status=live | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121122091054/http://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/17812363 | archive-date=22 November 2012 }}</ref> ===Defeating counter-illumination camouflage=== An animal camouflaged by counter-illumination is not completely invisible. A predator could resolve individual photophores on a camouflaged prey's underside, given sufficiently acute vision, or it could detect the remaining difference in brightness between the prey and the background. Predators with a visual acuity of 0.11 degrees (of arc) would be able to detect individual photophores of the Madeira lanternfish ''[[Ceratoscopelus maderensis]]'' at up to {{convert|2|metre|yard}}, and they would be able to see the general layout of the photophore clusters with poorer visual acuity. Much the same applies also to ''A. veranyi'', but it was largely given away by its unlit fins and tentacles, which appear dark against the background from as far away as {{convert|8|metre|yard}}. All the same, the counter-illumination camouflage of these species is extremely effective, radically reducing their detectability.<ref name=JohnsenWidder2004/>{{efn|The pattern of photophores may, in addition to matching background brightness, also serve to break up the animals' silhouettes, just as spots and stripes of coloured paint do in [[disruptive coloration]], but in the absence of experimental evidence it is uncertain how useful this is: it would only help when the sea surface background was uneven.<ref name=JohnsenWidder2004/>}} == Military prototypes == {{Main|Active camouflage}} [[Active camouflage]] in the form of counter-illumination has rarely been used for military purposes, but it has been prototyped in [[Ship camouflage|ship]] and [[aircraft camouflage]] from the Second World War onwards.<ref name=NavalMuseumQuebec/><ref name=NDRC/><ref name=Dann2011>{{cite journal |last1=Dann |first1=Rich |title=Yehudi Lights |journal=Centennial of Naval Aviation |date=2011 |volume=3 |issue=3 |page=15 |url=http://www.public.navy.mil/airfor/centennial/Documents/vol3iss3.pdf |quote=the prototype Grumman XFF-1 .. was fitted with lights as an active camouflage method .. Counter-illumination was tested again in 1973, using a U.S. Air Force F-4C Phantom II with lights, under the name COMPASS GHOST |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111007163146/http://www.public.navy.mil/airfor/centennial/Documents/vol3iss3.pdf |archive-date=2011-10-07 |access-date=2017-02-19 }}</ref> ===For ships=== [[File:HMS Largs by night with incomplete Diffused Lighting Camouflage 1942.jpg|thumb|upright=1.35|[[Diffused lighting camouflage]] prototype, not quite complete and set to maximum brightness, installed on [[HMS Largs|HMS ''Largs'']] in 1942]] {{main article|Diffused lighting camouflage}} [[Diffused lighting camouflage]], in which [[visible light]] is projected on to the sides of ships to match the faint glow of the night sky, was trialled by [[National Research Council (Canada)|Canada's National Research Council]] from 1941 onwards, and then by the [[Royal Navy]], during the Second World War. Some 60 light projectors were mounted all around the hull and on the ships' superstructure such as the bridge and funnels. On average, the system reduced the distance at which a ship could be seen from a surfaced submarine by 25% using binoculars, or by 33% using the naked eye. The camouflage worked best on clear moonless nights: on such a night in January 1942, [[HMS Largs|HMS ''Largs'']] was not seen until it closed to {{convert|2250|yard|metre}} when counter-illuminated, but was visible at {{convert|5250|yard|metre}} unlighted, a 57% reduction in range.<ref name=NavalMuseumQuebec>{{cite web | url=http://www.navy.forces.gc.ca/navres/NMQ_MNQ/researches_recherches/diffusedLighting_camouflageLumineux/index-eng.asp |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130522231113/http://www.navy.forces.gc.ca/navres/NMQ_MNQ/researches_recherches/diffusedLighting_camouflageLumineux/index-eng.asp |archive-date=22 May 2013 | work=Naval Museum of Quebec | publisher=Royal Canadian Navy | title=Diffused Lighting and its use in the Chaleur Bay | access-date=3 February 2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Admiralty |title=Trial Report D.L. 126: DL Trials on HMS ''Largs'' in Clyde Approaches |work=ADM/116/5026 Diffused Lighting |date=1942 |publisher=Admiralty |location=[[The National Archives, Kew]]|author1-link=British Admiralty }}</ref> ===For aircraft=== [[File:BRUSH Mittie US Patent 1293688.jpg|thumb|left|upright|[[Mary Taylor Brush]]'s 1917 patent application for camouflaging a [[Morane-Borel monoplane]] using light bulbs]] {{main article|Yehudi lights}} In 1916 the American artist [[Mary Taylor Brush]] experimented with camouflage on a [[Morane-Borel monoplane]] using light bulbs around the aircraft, and filed a 1917 patent that claimed she was "able to produce a machine which is practically invisible when in the air". The concept was not developed further during the [[First World War]].<ref name=ASMag>{{cite web |url=https://www.airspacemag.com/military-aviation/art-camouflage-180959768/ |title=Inventing the Invisible Airplane: When camouflage was fine art |publisher=Air & Space Magazine |last=D'Alto |first=Nick |year=2016 |access-date=9 March 2020}}</ref> [[File:Principle of Yehudi Lights with Avenger head-on view.jpg|thumb|Forward-pointing [[Yehudi lights]] on [[Grumman TBM Avenger]] raised the average brightness of the plane from a dark shape to the same as the sky.{{efn|The effect may be seen by standing back a little from the image and half-closing the eyes. The upper image becomes indistinct where the lower image remains as a dark shape.}}]] The Canadian ship concept was trialled in American aircraft including [[Consolidated B-24 Liberator|B-24 Liberators]] and [[Grumman TBM Avenger|TBM Avengers]] in the [[Yehudi lights]] project, starting in 1943, using forward-pointing lamps automatically adjusted to match the brightness of the sky. The goal was to enable a radar-equipped, sea-search aircraft to approach a surfaced [[submarine]] to within 30 seconds from arrival before being seen, to enable the aircraft to drop its [[depth charge]]s before the submarine could dive. There was insufficient electrical power available to illuminate the entire surface of the aircraft, and outboard lamps in the manner of diffused lighting camouflage would have interfered with the airflow over the aircraft's surface, so a system of forward-pointing lamps was chosen. These had a beam with a radius of 3 degrees, so pilots had to fly with the aircraft's nose pointed directly at the enemy. In a [[crosswind]], this required a curving approach path, rather than a straight-line path with the nose pointed upwind. In trials in 1945, a counter-illuminated Avenger was not seen until {{convert|3000|yd|km}} from its target, compared to {{convert|12|mi|km}} for an uncamouflaged aircraft.<ref name=NDRC>{{cite web |url=http://www.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/221102.pdf |work=Visibility Studies and Some Applications in the Field of Camouflage |publisher=Office of Scientific Research and Development, National Defence Research Committee |title=Camouflage of Sea-Search Aircraft |date=1946 |access-date=February 12, 2013 |last1=Bush |first1=Vannevar |last2=Conant |first2=James |last3=Harrison |first3=George |display-authors=2 |pages=225–240 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131023061821/http://www.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/221102.pdf |archive-date=October 23, 2013 }}</ref> The idea was revisited in 1973 when an [[F-4 Phantom]] was fitted with camouflaging lights in the "Compass Ghost" project.<ref name=Dann2011/> ==Notes== {{notelist}} == References == {{Reflist|30em}} == External links == * [http://www.scientificamerican.com/slideshow.cfm?id=bioluminescent-avatar Scientific American: 10 Bioluminescent Creatures] * [https://www.science.org/doi/abs/10.1126/science.208.4449.1286 Science Magazine: Bioluminescence in Mesopelagic Squid] * [https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/sciencenow/0305/04-glow-07.html Nova: Science Now: Glowing in the Dark] (Squid ''Abralia veranyi'' belly lights) {{Camouflage}} {{vision in animals}} [[Category:Antipredator adaptations]] [[Category:Deception]] [[Category:Counter-illumination camouflage]]'
New page wikitext, after the edit (new_wikitext)
'{{good article}} {{short description|Active camouflage using light matched to the background}} [[File:Squid Counterillumination.png|thumb|upright=1.7|Principle of the counter-illumination camouflage of the firefly squid, ''[[Watasenia scintillans]]''. When seen from below by a predator, the animal's light helps to match its brightness and colour to the sea surface above.]] '''Counter-illumination''' is a method of [[active camouflage]] seen in [[marine animal]]s such as [[firefly squid]] and [[midshipman fish]], and in military prototypes, producing light to match their backgrounds in both brightness and wavelength. Marine animals of the [[mesopelagic]] (mid-water) zone tend to appear dark against the bright water surface when seen from below. They can camouflage themselves, often [[anti-predator adaptation|from predators]] but also from their prey, by producing light with [[bioluminescence|bioluminescent]] [[photophore]]s on their downward-facing surfaces, reducing the contrast of their [[silhouette]]s against the background. The light may be produced by the animals themselves, or by [[mutualism (biology)|symbiotic]] [[bacteria]], often ''[[Aliivibrio fischeri]]''. Counter-illumination differs from [[countershading]], which uses only pigments such as [[melanin]] to reduce the appearance of shadows. It is one of the dominant types of [[aquatic camouflage]], along with transparency and [[silvering (camouflage)|silvering]]. All three methods make animals in open water resemble their environment. Counter-illumination has not come into widespread [[military camouflage|military use]], but during the [[Second World War]] it was trialled in [[ship camouflage|ships]] in the Canadian [[diffused lighting camouflage]] project, and in [[aircraft camouflage|aircraft]] in the American [[Yehudi lights]] project. == In marine animals == {{further|Underwater camouflage|List of camouflage methods}} ===Mechanism=== this whole article is a scam, the information is wrong ====Counter-illumination and countershading==== {{further|Underwater camouflage|Countershading}} In the sea, counter-illumination is one of three dominant methods of [[underwater camouflage]], the other two being transparency and silvering.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Herring |first1=Peter |author-link=Peter Herring |year=2002 |title=The Biology of the Deep Ocean |url=https://archive.org/details/biologydeepocean00herr |url-access=limited |location=Oxford |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=9780198549567 |pages=[https://archive.org/details/biologydeepocean00herr/page/n200 191]–195}}</ref> Among marine animals, especially [[crustacean]]s, [[cephalopod]]s, and [[fish]], counter-illumination [[camouflage]] occurs where [[bioluminescent]] light from [[photophore]]s on an [[organism]]'s ventral surface is matched to the light radiating from the environment.<ref name=JohnsenWidder2004>{{cite journal | last1=Johnsen | first1=Sönke | last2=Widder | first2=Edith A. | last3=Mobley | first3=Curtis D. | title=Propagation and Perception of Bioluminescence: Factors Affecting Counterillumination as a Cryptic Strategy | journal=The Biological Bulletin | volume=207 | issue=1 | year=2004 | pages=1–16 | issn=0006-3185 | doi=10.2307/1543624| pmid=15315939 | jstor=1543624 | s2cid=9048248 | url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/part/33120 }}</ref> The [[bioluminescence]] is used to obscure the organism's silhouette produced by the down-welling light. Counter-illumination differs from [[countershading]], also used by many marine animals, which uses pigments to darken the upper side of the body while the underside is as light as possible with pigment, namely white. Countershading fails when the light falling on the animal's underside is too weak to make it appear roughly as bright as the background. This commonly occurs when the background is the relatively bright ocean surface, and the animal is swimming in the [[mesopelagic]] depths of the sea. Counter-illumination goes further than countershading, actually brightening the underside of the body.<ref name=Young1977>{{cite journal |author1=Young, R.E,. |author2=Roper, C.F.E. | year=1977 | title=Intensity Regulation of Bioluminescence during Countershading in Living midwater animals | journal=Science | volume=191 | issue=4231 | pages=1046–1048 | doi=10.1126/science.1251214|pmid=1251214 |bibcode=1976Sci...191.1046Y }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | last=Rowland | first=Hannah M. | jstor=40485817 | title=Abbott Thayer to the present day: what have we learned about the function of countershading? | journal=[[Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B]] | year=2009 | volume=364 | issue=1516 | pages=519–527 | doi=10.1098/rstb.2008.0261 | pmid=19000972 | pmc=2674085}}</ref> ====Photophores==== {{main|Photophore}} [[File:Hygophum hygomii Photophores.jpg|thumb|left|upright=1.2<!--ratio for low image-->|[[Photophore]]s on a [[lanternfish]], the most common deep sea fish worldwide]] Counter-illumination relies on organs that produce light, photophores. These are roughly spherical<!--source says "glandular"--> structures that appear as [[luminescence|luminous]] spots on many marine animals, including fish and cephalopods. The organ can be simple, or as complex as the human eye, equipped with lenses, shutters, colour filters and reflectors.<ref name=TOL>{{cite web |url=http://tolweb.org/accessory/Cephalopod_Photophore_Terminology?acc_id=2015 |title=Cephalopod Photophore Terminology |publisher=Tolweb.org |access-date=16 October 2017 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170820160605/http://tolweb.org/accessory/Cephalopod_Photophore_Terminology?acc_id=2015 |archive-date=20 August 2017 }}</ref> [[File:Bobtail Squid Light Organ.svg|thumb|[[Sagittal section]] of the large eye-like light-producing organ of Hawaiian bobtail squid, ''[[Euprymna scolopes]]''. The organ houses symbiotic ''[[Aliivibrio fischeri]]'' bacteria.]] In the [[Hawaiian bobtail squid]] (''Euprymna scolopes'') light is produced in a large and complex two-lobed light organ inside the squid's mantle cavity. At the top of the organ (dorsal side) is a reflector, directing the light downwards. Below this are containers (crypts) lined with [[epithelium]] containing light-producing symbiotic bacteria. Below those is a kind of [[iris (eye)|iris]], consisting of branches (diverticula) of its [[ink sac]]; and below that is a lens. Both the reflector and the lens are derived from [[mesoderm]]. Light escapes from the organ downwards, some of it travelling directly, some coming off the reflector. Some 95% of the light-producing bacteria are voided at dawn every morning; the population in the light organ then builds up slowly during the day to a maximum of some 10<sup>12</sup> bacteria by nightfall: this species hides in sand away from predators during the day, and does not attempt counter-illumination during daylight, which would in any case require much brighter light than its light organ output. The emitted light shines through the skin of the squid's underside. To reduce light production, the squid can change the shape of its iris; it can also adjust the strength of yellow filters on its underside, which presumably change the balance of wavelengths emitted. The light production is correlated with the intensity of down-welling light but about one third as bright; the squid is able to track repeated changes in brightness.<ref name=Jones2004/> ====Matching light intensity and wavelength==== At night, nocturnal organisms match both the [[wavelength]] and the [[Brightness|light intensity]] of their bioluminescence to that of the down-welling moonlight and direct it downward as they swim, to help them remain unnoticed by any observers below.<ref name=Jones2004/><ref name=Guerrero-Ferreira2009>{{cite journal | author1=Guerrero-Ferreira, R. C. | author2=Nishiguchi, M. K. | year=2009 | title=Ultrastructure of light organs of loliginid squids and their bacterial symbionts: a novel model system for the study of marine symbioses | journal=Vie et Milieu | volume=59 | issue=3–4 | pages=307–313 | pmid=21152248 | pmc=2998345 | issn=0240-8759}}</ref> [[File:Linear visible spectrum.svg|thumb|upright=2.0|Spectrum of [[visible light]] showing colours at different [[wavelength]]s, in [[nanometre]]s]] In the [[eyeflash squid]] (''Abralia veranyi'') a species which [[diel vertical migration|daily migrates between the surface and deep waters]], a study showed that the light produced is bluer in cold waters and greener in warmer waters, temperature serving as a guide to the required [[emission spectrum]]. The animal has more than 550 photophores on its underside, consisting of rows of four to six large photophores running across the body, and many smaller photophores scattered over the surface. In cold water at 11 Celsius, the squid's photophores produced a simple (unimodal) spectrum with its peak at 490 nanometres (blue-green). In warmer water at 24 Celsius, the squid added a weaker emission (forming a shoulder on the side of the main peak) at around 440 nanometres (blue), from the same group of photophores. Other groups remained unilluminated: other species, and perhaps ''A. veranyi'' from its other groups of photophores, can produce a third spectral component when needed. Another squid, ''[[Abralia trigonura]]'', is able to produce three spectral components: at 440 and at 536 nanometres (green), appearing at 25 Celsius, apparently from the same photophores; and at 470–480 nanometres (blue-green), easily the strongest component at 6 Celsius, apparently from a different group of photophores. Many species can in addition vary the light they emit by passing it through a choice of colour filters.<ref name=HerringWidder1992>{{cite journal | last1=Herring | first1=P. J. |author-link=Peter Herring | last2=Widder | first2=E. A. | last3=Haddock | first3=S. H. D. |author3-link=Steven Haddock | title=Correlation of bioluminescence emissions with ventral photophores in the mesopelagic squidAbralia veranyi (Cephalopoda: Enoploteuthidae) | journal=Marine Biology | volume=112 | issue=2 | year=1992 | pages=293–298 | issn=0025-3162 | doi=10.1007/BF00702474| bibcode=1992MarBi.112..293H | s2cid=4661478 }}</ref> Counterillumination camouflage halved predation among individuals employing it compared to those not employing it in the [[midshipman fish]] ''[[Porichthys notatus]]''.<ref name=Jones2004/><ref name=HarperCase1999>{{cite journal | last1=Harper | first1=R. | last2=Case | first2=J. | title=Disruptive counterillumination and its anti-predatory value in the plainfish midshipman Porichthys notatus | journal=Marine Biology | date=1999 | volume=134 | issue=3 | pages=529–540 | doi=10.1007/s002270050568 | bibcode=1999MarBi.134..529H | s2cid=85386749 }}</ref> [[File:Cephalopod photophore structu.svg|thumb|Diagram of a small type of [[photophore]] in the skin of a [[cephalopod]], ''[[Abralia trigonura]]'', in vertical section]] ====Autogenic or bacteriogenic bioluminescence==== {{further|Bioluminescence}} The bioluminescence used for counter-illumination can be either [[wikt:autogenic|autogenic]] (produced by the animal itself, as in [[pelagic]] cephalopods such as ''[[Vampyroteuthis]]'', ''[[Stauroteuthis]]'', and pelagic octopuses in the [[Bolitaenidae]]<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Lindgren |first1=Annie R. |last2=Pankey |first2=Molly S. |last3=Hochberg |first3=Frederick G. |last4=Oakley |first4=Todd H. |title=A multi-gene phylogeny of Cephalopoda supports convergent morphological evolution in association with multiple habitat shifts in the marine environment |journal=BMC Evolutionary Biology |date=2012 |volume=12 |issue=1 |page=129 |doi=10.1186/1471-2148-12-129 |pmc=3733422 |pmid=22839506 |doi-access=free |bibcode=2012BMCEE..12..129L }}</ref>) or bacteriogenic (produced by [[bacteria]]l [[Symbiosis|symbionts]]). The luminescent bacterium is often ''[[Aliivibrio fischeri]]'', as for example in the Hawaiian bobtail squid.<ref name=Jones2004/> ===Purpose=== [[File:Porichthys plectrodon photophores.jpg|thumb|upright|Photophores on a nocturnal [[midshipman fish]], whose bioluminescence halves its rate of predation<ref name=Jones2004/>]] ====Hiding from predators==== Reducing the silhouette is primarily an [[Antipredator adaptation|anti-predator defence]] for mesopelagic (mid-water) organisms. The reduction of the silhouette from highly directional down-welling light is important, since there is no refuge in the open water, and [[predation]] occurs from below.<ref name=Young1977/><ref name=YoungRoper1976>Young. R. E; Roper. C. F. E. 1976. Bioluminescent countershading in Midwater Animals from living Squid. Science, New Series. Vol 191,4231: 1046-1048.</ref><ref name=BBC2004>{{cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/blueplanet/infobursts/counter_illumination_bg.shtml |title=Science & Nature - Sea Life - Ocean info - Counter-illumination |publisher=BBC |date=2004-03-11 |access-date=2012-10-03}}</ref> Many mesopelagic cephalopods such as the [[firefly squid]] (''Watasenia scintillans''), [[Decapoda|decapod]] crustaceans, and deep ocean fishes use counter-illumination; it works best for them when ambient light levels are low, leaving the diffuse down-welling light from above as the only light source.<ref name=Jones2004>{{cite journal |author1=Jones, B. W. |author2=Nishiguchi, M. K. |year=2004 |title=Counterillumination in the Hawaiian bobtail squid, ''Euprymna scolopes'' Berry (Mollusca : Cephalopoda) |journal=[[Marine Biology (journal)|Marine Biology]] |volume=144 |issue=6 |pages=1151–1155 |doi=10.1007/s00227-003-1285-3 |bibcode=2004MarBi.144.1151J |s2cid=86576334 |url=http://www.medmicro.wisc.edu/labs/mcfall_ruby_papers/pdf/2004/Jones_Nishiguchi_2004_Biol.pdf |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100611082606/http://www.medmicro.wisc.edu/labs/mcfall_ruby_papers/pdf/2004/Jones_Nishiguchi_2004_Biol.pdf |archive-date=11 June 2010}}</ref><ref name=Young1977/> Some deep water sharks, including ''[[Dalatias licha]]'', ''[[Etmopterus lucifer]]'', and ''[[Etmopterus granulosus]]'', are bioluminescent, most likely for camouflage from predators that attack from beneath.<ref name="Mallefet Stevens Duchatelet 2021">{{cite journal | last1=Mallefet | first1=Jérôme | last2=Stevens | first2=Darren W. | last3=Duchatelet | first3=Laurent | title=Bioluminescence of the Largest Luminous Vertebrate, the Kitefin Shark, Dalatias licha: First Insights and Comparative Aspects | journal=Frontiers in Marine Science | publisher=Frontiers Media SA | volume=8 | date=26 February 2021 | issn=2296-7745 | doi=10.3389/fmars.2021.633582| doi-access=free }}</ref> ====Hiding from prey==== Besides its effectiveness as a predator avoidance mechanism, counter-illumination also serves as an essential tool to predators themselves. Some shark species, such as the deepwater [[velvet belly lanternshark]] (''Etmopterus spinax''), use counter-illumination to remain hidden from their prey.<ref>{{cite journal |author1=Claes, Julien M. |author2=Aksnes, Dag L. |author3=Mallefet, Jérôme |year=2010 |title=Phantom hunter of the fjords: camouflage by counterillumination in a shark (''Etmopterus spinax'') |journal=Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology |volume=388 |issue=1–2 |pages=28–32 |doi=10.1016/j.jembe.2010.03.009 |url=http://www.bio.uib.no/modelling/papers/Claes_2010_Phantom_hunter.pdf |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110927154130/http://www.bio.uib.no/modelling/papers/Claes_2010_Phantom_hunter.pdf |archive-date=2011-09-27 |access-date=2010-11-14 }}</ref> Other well-studied examples include the [[cookiecutter shark]] (''Isistius brasiliensis''), the [[marine hatchetfish]], and the Hawaiian bobtail squid.<ref name=Jones2004/> More than 10% of shark species may be bioluminescent, though some such as [[lantern shark]]s may use the light for [[signalling theory|signalling]] as well as for camouflage.<ref>{{cite web | author=Davies, Ella | url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/17812363 | title=Tiny sharks provide glowing clue | publisher=BBC | date=26 April 2012 | access-date=12 February 2013 | url-status=live | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121122091054/http://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/17812363 | archive-date=22 November 2012 }}</ref> ===Defeating counter-illumination camouflage=== An animal camouflaged by counter-illumination is not completely invisible. A predator could resolve individual photophores on a camouflaged prey's underside, given sufficiently acute vision, or it could detect the remaining difference in brightness between the prey and the background. Predators with a visual acuity of 0.11 degrees (of arc) would be able to detect individual photophores of the Madeira lanternfish ''[[Ceratoscopelus maderensis]]'' at up to {{convert|2|metre|yard}}, and they would be able to see the general layout of the photophore clusters with poorer visual acuity. Much the same applies also to ''A. veranyi'', but it was largely given away by its unlit fins and tentacles, which appear dark against the background from as far away as {{convert|8|metre|yard}}. All the same, the counter-illumination camouflage of these species is extremely effective, radically reducing their detectability.<ref name=JohnsenWidder2004/>{{efn|The pattern of photophores may, in addition to matching background brightness, also serve to break up the animals' silhouettes, just as spots and stripes of coloured paint do in [[disruptive coloration]], but in the absence of experimental evidence it is uncertain how useful this is: it would only help when the sea surface background was uneven.<ref name=JohnsenWidder2004/>}} == Military prototypes == {{Main|Active camouflage}} [[Active camouflage]] in the form of counter-illumination has rarely been used for military purposes, but it has been prototyped in [[Ship camouflage|ship]] and [[aircraft camouflage]] from the Second World War onwards.<ref name=NavalMuseumQuebec/><ref name=NDRC/><ref name=Dann2011>{{cite journal |last1=Dann |first1=Rich |title=Yehudi Lights |journal=Centennial of Naval Aviation |date=2011 |volume=3 |issue=3 |page=15 |url=http://www.public.navy.mil/airfor/centennial/Documents/vol3iss3.pdf |quote=the prototype Grumman XFF-1 .. was fitted with lights as an active camouflage method .. Counter-illumination was tested again in 1973, using a U.S. Air Force F-4C Phantom II with lights, under the name COMPASS GHOST |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111007163146/http://www.public.navy.mil/airfor/centennial/Documents/vol3iss3.pdf |archive-date=2011-10-07 |access-date=2017-02-19 }}</ref> ===For ships=== [[File:HMS Largs by night with incomplete Diffused Lighting Camouflage 1942.jpg|thumb|upright=1.35|[[Diffused lighting camouflage]] prototype, not quite complete and set to maximum brightness, installed on [[HMS Largs|HMS ''Largs'']] in 1942]] {{main article|Diffused lighting camouflage}} [[Diffused lighting camouflage]], in which [[visible light]] is projected on to the sides of ships to match the faint glow of the night sky, was trialled by [[National Research Council (Canada)|Canada's National Research Council]] from 1941 onwards, and then by the [[Royal Navy]], during the Second World War. Some 60 light projectors were mounted all around the hull and on the ships' superstructure such as the bridge and funnels. On average, the system reduced the distance at which a ship could be seen from a surfaced submarine by 25% using binoculars, or by 33% using the naked eye. The camouflage worked best on clear moonless nights: on such a night in January 1942, [[HMS Largs|HMS ''Largs'']] was not seen until it closed to {{convert|2250|yard|metre}} when counter-illuminated, but was visible at {{convert|5250|yard|metre}} unlighted, a 57% reduction in range.<ref name=NavalMuseumQuebec>{{cite web | url=http://www.navy.forces.gc.ca/navres/NMQ_MNQ/researches_recherches/diffusedLighting_camouflageLumineux/index-eng.asp |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130522231113/http://www.navy.forces.gc.ca/navres/NMQ_MNQ/researches_recherches/diffusedLighting_camouflageLumineux/index-eng.asp |archive-date=22 May 2013 | work=Naval Museum of Quebec | publisher=Royal Canadian Navy | title=Diffused Lighting and its use in the Chaleur Bay | access-date=3 February 2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Admiralty |title=Trial Report D.L. 126: DL Trials on HMS ''Largs'' in Clyde Approaches |work=ADM/116/5026 Diffused Lighting |date=1942 |publisher=Admiralty |location=[[The National Archives, Kew]]|author1-link=British Admiralty }}</ref> ===For aircraft=== [[File:BRUSH Mittie US Patent 1293688.jpg|thumb|left|upright|[[Mary Taylor Brush]]'s 1917 patent application for camouflaging a [[Morane-Borel monoplane]] using light bulbs]] {{main article|Yehudi lights}} In 1916 the American artist [[Mary Taylor Brush]] experimented with camouflage on a [[Morane-Borel monoplane]] using light bulbs around the aircraft, and filed a 1917 patent that claimed she was "able to produce a machine which is practically invisible when in the air". The concept was not developed further during the [[First World War]].<ref name=ASMag>{{cite web |url=https://www.airspacemag.com/military-aviation/art-camouflage-180959768/ |title=Inventing the Invisible Airplane: When camouflage was fine art |publisher=Air & Space Magazine |last=D'Alto |first=Nick |year=2016 |access-date=9 March 2020}}</ref> [[File:Principle of Yehudi Lights with Avenger head-on view.jpg|thumb|Forward-pointing [[Yehudi lights]] on [[Grumman TBM Avenger]] raised the average brightness of the plane from a dark shape to the same as the sky.{{efn|The effect may be seen by standing back a little from the image and half-closing the eyes. The upper image becomes indistinct where the lower image remains as a dark shape.}}]] The Canadian ship concept was trialled in American aircraft including [[Consolidated B-24 Liberator|B-24 Liberators]] and [[Grumman TBM Avenger|TBM Avengers]] in the [[Yehudi lights]] project, starting in 1943, using forward-pointing lamps automatically adjusted to match the brightness of the sky. The goal was to enable a radar-equipped, sea-search aircraft to approach a surfaced [[submarine]] to within 30 seconds from arrival before being seen, to enable the aircraft to drop its [[depth charge]]s before the submarine could dive. There was insufficient electrical power available to illuminate the entire surface of the aircraft, and outboard lamps in the manner of diffused lighting camouflage would have interfered with the airflow over the aircraft's surface, so a system of forward-pointing lamps was chosen. These had a beam with a radius of 3 degrees, so pilots had to fly with the aircraft's nose pointed directly at the enemy. In a [[crosswind]], this required a curving approach path, rather than a straight-line path with the nose pointed upwind. In trials in 1945, a counter-illuminated Avenger was not seen until {{convert|3000|yd|km}} from its target, compared to {{convert|12|mi|km}} for an uncamouflaged aircraft.<ref name=NDRC>{{cite web |url=http://www.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/221102.pdf |work=Visibility Studies and Some Applications in the Field of Camouflage |publisher=Office of Scientific Research and Development, National Defence Research Committee |title=Camouflage of Sea-Search Aircraft |date=1946 |access-date=February 12, 2013 |last1=Bush |first1=Vannevar |last2=Conant |first2=James |last3=Harrison |first3=George |display-authors=2 |pages=225–240 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131023061821/http://www.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/221102.pdf |archive-date=October 23, 2013 }}</ref> The idea was revisited in 1973 when an [[F-4 Phantom]] was fitted with camouflaging lights in the "Compass Ghost" project.<ref name=Dann2011/> ==Notes== {{notelist}} == References == {{Reflist|30em}} == External links == * [http://www.scientificamerican.com/slideshow.cfm?id=bioluminescent-avatar Scientific American: 10 Bioluminescent Creatures] * [https://www.science.org/doi/abs/10.1126/science.208.4449.1286 Science Magazine: Bioluminescence in Mesopelagic Squid] * [https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/sciencenow/0305/04-glow-07.html Nova: Science Now: Glowing in the Dark] (Squid ''Abralia veranyi'' belly lights) {{Camouflage}} {{vision in animals}} [[Category:Antipredator adaptations]] [[Category:Deception]] [[Category:Counter-illumination camouflage]]'
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