How the Morpho Butterfly Can Be Blue But Also Not Really Blue
Released on 12/19/2016
[Announcer] This is the most striking blue
in the animal kingdom.
Oh, also, the morpho butterfly doesn't have a speck
of blue pigment at all.
It makes sense, trust me here.
You'll find the morpho butterfly
in the forests of South and Central America.
You'd think that the wonderful blue
would make the butterfly more conspicuous to predators
and you'd be right.
But it also needs to spot other butterflies.
This is especially true of males
who are highly territorial.
Plus, when the morpho closes it's wings,
it flashes a more subdued pattern that helps it blend in.
So blue is for signaling and brown is for camouflage.
And if it needs to startle an approaching predator
hopefully these eye spots will do.
But back to the blue.
It isn't actually a pigment.
Instead, this is known as structural coloration
and it's all about tricks of light.
The blue side of the wing is covered in special scales.
When light hits these,
the scales absorb all the component colors of that light
save for blue, which they reflect back at your eyeball.
That's why the wings seem to change color
depending on the angle.
It has nothing to do with pigment,
but a shift in how the blue light is reflected.
And that my friends, is how to look blue
without actually being blue.
Historian Answers Revolution Questions
Has The U.S. Become A Surveillance State?
Sydney Sweeney Answers The Web's Most Searched Questions
Economics Professor Answers Great Depression Questions
Palantir CEO Alex Karp On Government Contracts, Immigration, and the Future of Work
Historian Answers Native American Questions
Cryogenics, AI Avatars, and The Future of Dying
EJAE on KPop Demon Hunters and Her Journey to Success
Why Conspiracy Theories Took Hold When Charlie Kirk Died
Historian Answers Folklore Questions