Courtship displays can signal the relative physical quality of males vying for females. A male peacock, for example, entices peahens by raising and vibrating his long train feathers, said Roslyn Dakin from the University of British Columbia in Canada.
The vibrations both make the feathers rattle and make the brightly coloured eyespots appear to hover motionless against an oscillating iridescent background. Males with eyespots that are the most iridescent win most of the matings.
Researchers used high-speed video to analyse the "train-rattling" movements of vibrating train and tail feathers in 14 adult peacocks, and measured the vibrations of individual feathers in the lab.
Scanning electron microscopy then showed how the eyespots stay so still during displays. Dakin and colleagues found that eyespot barbs are locked together with microhooks much like those on flight feathers.
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This gives each eyespot greater density than the surrounding loose barbs, keeping it essentially in place as the loose barbs shimmer in the background.
The findings showed that the longer the train feathers, the faster the males shook their feathers during courtship displays, requiring more muscular effort.
"Charles Darwin observed that peacocks vibrate their feathers during courtship, but it took this multidisciplinary team of scientists to characterise the dynamics of this behaviour," said Suzanne Kane, a co-author of the study.
The study was published in the journal PLOS ONE.