Coloration can be a property of metals, but it primarily depends on their surface characteristics and the way they interact with light. While many metals have a characteristic color, such as gold's yellow hue or copper's reddish tone, other factors like oxidation, alloying with other elements, and surface treatments can alter their appearance. Additionally, some metals can appear different colors under various lighting conditions or when viewed from different angles due to phenomena like interference or diffraction.
Yes, the haemoglobin is the pigment that carries oxygen and has the red colouration.
It's a transition metal.
Chromium is a metal. It belongs to transition metal elements.
Rb (rubidium) is a metal.
Lithium is a metal. In fact, it is an alkali metal (the metals found in group I are alkali metals).
if you mean colouration then no if they don't have a lot of colouration it means there stressed
Removes the colouration.
Blood.
There is no such English word as 'erytic', this question can not be answered.
The wasp has a banded colouration of black and yellow. Certain poisonous tree frogs have bright colouration. There are caterpillars that are also brightly coloured, and often sporting irritating hairs, or have a horrible taste. All are examples of warning colouration that predators will associate (once tried) with something best to avoid in the future.
brown, with white bone tusks
The bright colours tend to be a warning that the frog is poisonous or has a nasty taste. Some frogs use the same warning colouration even though they are not poisonous or nasty tasting - they mimic the warning colouration. Other frogs rely on their drab colouration to camouflage themselves into the background.
- Camouflage - Aposematic colouration - Chemical - Structural - Behavioural
the natural colouration of a budgie is a green body with a yellow head
There is no answer to this. Different birds have developed with different colouration.
because its a combination of green and blue you mong
what is the colour of the blue and orange colouration in methyl orange