# Oil Things Bright and Beautiful? How Hydrocarbon Pollution Impacts Guppy Ornamentation

**Authors:** Hannah Rose McGovern, Francesco Santi, Amy Deacon, Rüdiger Riesch

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/ece3.73105 · Ecology and Evolution · 2026-02-18

## TL;DR

This study explores how oil pollution affects the colorful appearance of guppies, revealing differences in male ornamentation across polluted and non-polluted habitats.

## Contribution

The study provides new insights into how crude oil pollution influences sexual ornamentation in guppies through comparative analysis of different polluted and non-polluted sites.

## Key findings

- Guppies from anthropogenically polluted habitats showed increased iridescence area and darker orange color intensity.
- The Pitch Lake guppies exhibited a unique ornamentation phenotype distinct from both polluted and non-polluted populations.
- Variation in ornamentation suggests non-uniform responses to pollution at the species level.

## Abstract

Brightly coloured male ornamentation often plays an important role in sexual selection, but the extent to which the expression of these ornaments is affected by different forms of pollution is still not well understood. Guppies (
Poecilia reticulata
) can often be found in highly polluted and degraded habitats, including oil‐polluted habitats in southwestern Trinidad. Male guppy ornamentation is polymorphic, and while colour patterns (including area cover of different ornaments) have a heritable basis, the intensity of different colour patches can be linked to phenotypic plasticity, partially modulated via guppy diet. Here, we aimed to understand how the area and colour intensity of this ornamentation varied between the Pitch Lake (a natural source of crude‐oil pollution), two anthropogenically polluted and two non‐polluted sites. We found that colour intensity and area of ornamentation both differed between habitat types, with males from anthropogenically polluted habitats having a greater area of iridescence ornamentation but darker orange colour intensity. However, for both area and intensity, there was considerable variation between polluted populations. Additionally, ornamentation in the Pitch Lake differed from both anthropogenically polluted and non‐polluted habitats. This study demonstrates the non‐uniform response to crude oil pollution even on a species level, and highlights the importance of considering both evolutionary and ecological variation when predicting and mitigating impacts of pollution.

Spatial variation in crude oil pollution in Trinidad leads to differing levels of pollutant exposure in connected guppy populations. Male guppy ornamentation is an important sexually selected trait affected by environmental changes. Measuring area and intensity of this ornamentation, we found guppies from anthropogenically polluted habitats had greater area of iridescence and darker orange intensity compared to non‐polluted habitats. The naturally polluted Pitch Lake had a unique phenotype compared to both anthropogenically polluted and non‐polluted habitats.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Poecilia reticulata (taxon 8081)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** infection (MESH:D007239), toxicity (MESH:D064420), developmental deformities (MESH:D009140), parasite infection (MESH:D010272)
- **Chemicals:** guanine (MESH:D006147), Triphenyltin (MESH:C030665), oxygen (MESH:D010100), sulphide (MESH:D013440), silver (MESH:D012834), PAH (MESH:D011084), Carotenoids (MESH:D002338), water (MESH:D014867), Hydrocarbon (MESH:D006838), Oil (MESH:D009821), DeltaE (-), pteridines (MESH:D011621), drosopterin (MESH:C020306), melanin (MESH:D008543), asphalt (MESH:C006647)
- **Species:** Anablepsoides hartii (species) [taxon 44704], Gambusia hubbsi (Hubbs's gambusia, species) [taxon 37274], Fundulus heteroclitus (Atlantic killifish, species) [taxon 8078], Sternula superciliaris (species) [taxon 425656], Girardinichthys multiradiatus (species) [taxon 208333], Egretta thula (snowy egret, species) [taxon 110681], Polycentrus schomburgkii (Guyana leaffish, species) [taxon 1206945], Poecilia reticulata (guppy, species) [taxon 8081], PX clade (clade) [taxon 569578]

## Full text

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## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12916261/full.md

## References

80 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12916261/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12916261