?:reviewBody
|
-
On 9 March 2015, the Facebook page Discovering Our Wonderful World published the image of purple ladybugs reproduced above, along with the following text about these visually remarkable small small beetles: While the top comments about the photograph were complimentary, changing the default sorting method to display new comments first revealed a bevy of skeptical users. Finding the original photograph that had been altered to create the image of purple ladybugs wasn't difficult, and the photographer's web site provided all the information necessary to discern the legitimacy of the purple ladybugs image: It was clear from the order of images that the photographer snapped the picture of typical red ladybugs seen in the montage before altering their color as part of her presented work. Unless she also happened upon red, yellow, green, and purple ladybugs (all positioned in the exact same formation) in her travels, those images were simply a creative exercise in digital color shading. It is true that ladybugs (or ladybirds in the UK) exhibit some color variations, as noted in a June 2015 study undertaken at the Universities of Exeter and Cambridge examining the relationship between ladybug signaling and their visual appearance to predatory birds: Purple ladybugs weren't the first enhanced members of the animal kingdom to dupe social media users: teal owls (along with several other hues of owl) have proved to be popular online fakes.
(en)
|