Is a zebra
white with black stripes or black with white
stripes?
June M.
Wingert
RM(NRM)
Research Associate
Comparative Pathology
Department
Baylor College of
Medicine
Area of science:
Zoology
It is generally believed that zebras are
dark animals, with white stripes where the pigmentation is
inhibited. The pigment of the hair is found solely in the
hair and not in the skin. The reasons for thinking that they
were originally pigmented animals are that (1) white horses
would not survive well in the African plains or forests; (2)
there used to be a fourth species of zebra, the quagga
(which was overeaten to extinction in the eighteen
hundreds). The quagga had the zebra striping pattern in the
front of the animal, but had a dark rump; (3) when the
region between the pigmented bands becomes too wide,
secondary stripes emerge, as if suppression was
weakening.
Zebra stripes have often been thought to be
an adaptation that prevents zebras from being seen by
predators such as lions or hyenas. (This hypothesis goes
back at least to Rudyard Kipling [1908]). The alternating
stripes obscure the outline of the zebra. This may serve as
camoflage, allowing the zebra to blend in with its backgound
(Thayer, 1909; Marler and Hamilton, 1968) and/or it may
serve to confuse a predator as to the distance of the
fleeing animal (Cott, 1957; Kruuk, 1972). However, neither
of these hypotheses can be easily confirmed. A different
hypothesis (Waage, 1981) contends that the stripes serve to
obliterate a large single-colored region that is favored by
biting insects such as the tsetse fly. These flies prefer
large, dark, moving animals (Vale, 1974).
How did the zebra get its stripes? Proximate
(developmental) mechanism:
Jonathan Bard of Edinburgh has hypothesized
a mechanism for the production of zebra stripes in the three
species of extant zebra. His model claims that while neural
crest cells begin migration at week two of gestation (in the
horse), the zebra striping patterns are generated between
weeks three and five, depending upon the species. Moreover,
Bard asserts that the three patterns of striping are
precisely those predicted if the original pattern was the
same in each zebra, but was established at different times
within this three week period. In the case of the imperial
zebra, all the stripes are perpendicular to the dorsal axis,
but are thicker towards the neck. This would be expected if
the striping pattern originated at week five (Figure 2A). At
week five, most of the differential body growth has ceased,
except for the neck region, which becomes extended, and the
rump, which is slightly shortened. Thus, if the stripes were
formed at week 5, they should all be parallel, but slightly
wider at the neck and slimmer at the rump.
The stripes of the mountain zebra probably
form towards the end of week 4. If the stripes were
originally parallel, those in the rear of the embryo would
be pulled back towards the rump by the growth of the
hindparts of the horse (Figure 2B). Similarly, if the
stripes of the common zebra were generated during the third
week of zebra gestation, the differential growth rate of the
rump between weeks three and four would also pull the
stripes posteriorly (Figure 2C).
Bard's hypothesis that all the stripes
originally are the same width and are generated at different
times in the three species also explains the numbers of
stripes in each species. The common zebra has 26 stripes per
side, and the three week Equus embryo is generally 11 mm
long. This gives a spacing of about 0.42 mm per stripe. If
the 43 stripes of the mountain zebra were generated in the
17 mm embryo of the 3.75 week zebra, the spacing is also
0.40 mm per stripe. At week 5, the embryo is 32 mm long, and
the 80 stripes would yield the spacing of 0.40 mm per
stripe. Therefore, the striping patterns of the common
zebra, mountain zebra, and imperial zebra can be explained
if the stripes are generated 0.4 mm apart in the 3, 4, and 5
week embryos, respectively.
Bard's hypothesis for the generation of
stripes in three species of zebras. The spacing and size of
the stripes are the same. What differs is the time at which
the stripes were generated. If generated during week 3, the
stripes begin perpendicular to the anterior-posterior body
axis, but become parallel to this axis in the rump, since
the rear of the zebra is still growing. This generates the
pattern of common zebra. If the striping pattern is
generated on week 4, most of the rump has grown, and the
hind stripes are more perpedicular to the body axis. This
generates the pattern seen in the mountain zebra. If the
striping pattern is generated on week 5, there is space for
many more stripes, all of which are perpendicular to the
body axis. This generates the striping pattern of the
imperial zebra. (After Bard, 1977.)
It is not known how the pattern is initiated
or what activators or inhibitors are being generated. It is
difficult to imagine how such a pattern can be generated by
preformed maternal instructions, responses to gradients, or
regional inductions. It has been proposed that the Turing
reaction-diffusion models could produce these alternative
pigmented and non-pigmented bands. Murray (1981) has shown
that the chevrons at the base of the zebra's limbs is the
shape expected by the overlapping of two Turing-type
reaction-diffusion systems.
References:
Bard, J. B. L. 1977. A unity underlying
the different zebra striping patterns. J. Zool. (London)
183: 527 - 539.
Bard, J. B. L. 1981. A model for
generating aspects of zebra and other mammalian coat
patterns. J.
Theoret. Biol. 19: 363 -
385.
Cott, H. B. 1957. Adaptive Colouration in
Animals. John Dickens. Northampton.
Kipling, R. 1908. Just So Stories.
Macmillan, London.
Kruuk, H. 1972. The Spotted Hyena.
University of Chicago Press, Chicago.
Marler, P. and Hamilton, W. J. 1968.
Mechanisms of Animal Behavior. Wiley, New
York.
Murray, J. D. 1981. A pre-pattern
formation mechanism for animal coat markings. J. Theoret.
Biol. 88: 161 - 199.
Thayer, A. H. 1909. Concealing Coloration
in the Animal Kingdom. Macmillan, New
York.
Vale, G. A. 1974. The response of tsetse
flies (Diptera, Glossinidae) to mobile and stationary baits.
Bull. Entom. Res. 64: 545 - 588.
Waage, J. K. 1981. How the zebra got its
stripes: biting flies as selective agents in the evolution
of zebra coloration. J. Entom. Soc. South Afric. 44: 351 -
358.

Source: Mad Sci
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