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  • There are no blue tigers.

  • No blue bats, no blue squirrels, no blue dogs.

  • Even blue whales aren't that blue.

  • Animals come in pretty much every color, but blue seems to be the rarest.

  • What's cool, though, is when we do find a blue animal, they're awesome looking.

  • Nature doesn't do halfway with blue.

  • To understand why this is, we're gonna journey through evolution, chemistry, and some very cool physics.

  • But, first, we're gonna need to understand why animals are any color at all,

  • and to do that, we need to go look at some butterflies, because butterflies are awesome.

  • And if you don't think so, you're wrong.

  • This is Bob Robbins.

  • He's curator of Lepidoptera at the National Museum of Natural History in Washington D.C.

  • Butterflies are awesome.

  • Make no mistake about it.

  • They're a group of moths that evolved to be active during the day,

  • and if you're active during the day, that means you have an advantage; you can use light to communicate.

  • You probably realize this, but out of all insects, butterflies display the brightest and most detailed patterns.

  • And there's a good reason for that:

  • The colors in butterfly wings deliver messages, like "I'm toxic", or "I'm a male and this is my territory",

  • but not all butterfly colors are created equal.

  • If we zoom way in on a butterfly wing, we see the colors come from tiny scales.

  • It's actually how moths and butterflies get their scientific name.

  • Oranges, reds, yellows brownsthose scales all contain pigments, organic molecules that absorb every color except what we see.

  • Black scales absorb all colors.

  • Animals, from butterflies to birds to you and me, don't make these pigments from scratch, they're made from ingredients in our diet.

  • You might know this thanks to flamingos.

  • They're born gray, but turn pink thanks to pigments called carotenoids in crustaceans they eat.

  • So when it comes to these colors, you are what you eat.

  • But not so for blue.

  • Blue is different.

  • If you move the camera, if you can see that the color changes as you move the camera.

  • It does. It's like a hologram thing.

  • Yeah, and this is because there's no blue pigment in these butterflies

  • Waitso they're blue, but they're not really blue?

  • That's correct! Yes.

  • You're lying to me, butterflies!

  • These are Blue Morpho butterflies, maybe the prettiest butterflies of all.

  • I meanthey did make it the butterfly emoji.

  • The blue color isn't from a pigment.

  • The blue comes from the shape of the wing scale itself, and when I learned how this works, it kinda blew my mind.

  • If we zoom way in on a blue wing scale, we see these little ridges.

  • We slice across the scale and look closer, we see those ridges are shaped like tiny Christmas trees.

  • The arrangement of the branches is what gives Morpho wings their blue color.

  • When light comes in, some bounces off the top surface.

  • But some light passes into the layer and reflects off the bottom surface.

  • For most colors of light, waves reflecting from the top and bottom will be out of phase,

  • they'll be canceled out, and that light is removed.

  • But blue light has just the right wavelength; the reflected light waves are in sync, and that color makes it to our eye.

  • This hall of mirrors only lets blue light escape.

  • There's even a pigment at the base that absorbs stray red and green light to make the blue even more pure.

  • That's how we get this awesome iridescent blue.

  • The microscopic structure of the wing itself.

  • All of this happens because of the way light bends when it moves from air into another material.

  • So if we fill all those tiny gaps with something other than air, like alcohol, the blue disappears.

  • Technically, this "changes the index of refraction", but in plain English, that means blue light is no longer bent the right way.

  • The microscopic light filter is broken until the alcohol evaporates, and the color returns.

  • But these butterflies live in the rainforest.

  • You think they'd lose their color any time they got wet, right?

  • Well, watch this.

  • These wing scales are made of a material that's naturally water-resistant.

  • They stay blue in any weather.

  • So what about this blue jay feather?

  • If we look through it, the color completely disappears. No blue pigment.

  • Each feather bristle contains light-scattering microscopic beads, spaced so everything but blue light is canceled out.

  • Unlike the highly-ordered structures we find in butterfly wings, these feather structures are more messy, like a foam,

  • so instead of changing as we move, the color's more even from every direction.

  • Peacock tail feathers?

  • Again, it's the shape of the feather, not pigment.

  • But the light-reflecting structures here are more ordered, like a crystal, so it's brighter from certain angles.

  • There's even a monkeyWHOA, let's keep this PG!!–

  • even that color is made by the adding and subtracting of light waves thanks to structures in the skin,

  • and yes, even your blue eyes, are colored by structures, not pigments.

  • Outside of the ocean, almost exclusively, the bluest living things make their colors with microscopic structures, and each one's a little different.

  • No vertebrate, not a single bird or mammal or reptile that we know of, makes a blue pigment on its body.

  • In fact, there's only one known butterfly that has cracked the code for making a true blue pigment.

  • Blue as a pigment in nature is incredibly rare.

  • But there's one exception so far that we know about, and these are over here called the olivewings.

  • They have evolved a blue pigment.

  • And they're not very common and we don't know much about them, and I don't know of any other blue pigment.

  • That's a really special butterfly.

  • But why is almost all of nature's blue made from structures and not pigments like everything else?

  • I've asked this question to several scientists that study color, and here's their best theory so far:

  • At some point way back in time, birds and butterflies evolved the ability to see blue light.

  • But they hadn't yet evolved a way to paint their bodies that color.

  • But if they could, it'd be like going from early Beatles to Sgt. Pepper's Beatles.

  • It meant new opportunities for communicating and survival.

  • Creating some blue pigmentout of the bluewould have required inventing new chemistry, and there was no way to just add that recipe to their genes.

  • It was much easier for evolution to change the shape of their bodies, ever so slightly, at the most microscopic level, and create blue using physics instead.

  • They solved a biology problem with engineering.

  • What I love about this is these colors have fascinated curious people for hundreds of years.

  • After looking at peacock feathers through one of the first microscopes back in the 1600's

  • Robert Hooke wrote, "These colours are onely fantastical ones."

  • Even Isaac Newton noticed there was something unusual about these blues, and scientists have been studying it ever since.

  • Not only because the science is interesting, but because it's beautiful.

  • Thanks for watching, and stay curious.

There are no blue tigers.

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