
"It was a mix of serendipity and curiosity that led us to shine a UV light on the platypuses at the Field Museum," said lead author Professor Paula Spaeth Anich, Associate Professor of Biology and Natural Resources at Northland College. And with colleagues at Northland College and Colorado State University, they are working on a project to further explore the phenomenon across the mammalian family tree. The researchers would now like to work with an Australian team to observe biofluorescence in wild animals. The researchers suggest this may be a way for platypuses to see and interact with each other in the dark. It may be that these mammals - and possibly others - developed biofluorescence to adapt to low light conditions. Like the marsupial opossum and the placental flying squirrel, platypuses are most active during the night and at dawn and dusk. The fur of the platypus absorbs UV (wavelengths of 200-400 nanometers) and re-emits visible light (of 500-600 nanometers), making it fluoresce. But under UV light they appeared green or cyan. In visible light, the fur of all three platypus specimens was uniformly brown. They studied three museum platypus specimens: a female and a male from the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago and another male specimen from the University of Nebraska State Museum. While confirming this field observation with preserved museum specimens, the researchers decided to examine the platypuses in the next drawer along too. One of the paper's authors discovered pink biofluorescence in flying squirrels by accident while conducting a night survey for lichens, a finding reported in an earlier paper. Two mammals - the opossum and the flying squirrel - are already known to have fur that biofluoresces under under ultraviolet (UV) light.

The research article " Biofluorescence in the platypus ( Ornithorhynchus anatinus)" was published in De Gruyter's international journal Mammalia. This is the first observation of biofluorescence in an egg-laying mammal (monotreme), suggesting this extraordinary trait may not be as rare as previously thought. The fur of the platypus - an Australian species threatened with extinction - glows green under ultraviolet light, a new study finds. Image: The Platypus (Ornithorhynchus anatinus) is one of the oddities of nature: a mammal that lays eggs, and is like a mix of several other animals being duck-billed, beaver-tailed, and otter-footed.
