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Cuttlefish Twist Polarized Light in Courtship, PNAS Study Shows

Researchers captured the display by using polarization cameras to watch wild‑caught males rotate light with birefringent arm tissue.

Overview

  • Male Doratosepion andreanum extend and coil specialized long arms during courtship to create alternating bands of horizontally and vertically oriented light that are highly conspicuous to cuttlefish vision.
  • In observation tanks that replicated oceanic horizontal polarization, polarization‑camera footage showed no such pattern in non‑courting states, indicating the signal is specific to courtship.
  • Optical tests and tissue analyses found iridophores generate horizontally polarized reflections that rotate by roughly 90 degrees to vertical as light passes through transparent, birefringent arm muscle.
  • The arm shape and thickness enhance the effect, with adjacent arm tips producing especially strong polarization contrast comparable in conspicuousness to colorful ornaments in other species.
  • The authors present this as the first evidence of a mating display based on polarization patterns invisible to humans, and an outside expert suggested possible bio‑inspired and underwater signaling applications that remain speculative.