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Turacoverdin


Turacoverdin is a unique copper uroporphyrin pigment responsible for the bright green coloration of several birds of the family Musophagidae, most notably the turaco. It is chemically related to turacin, a red pigment also found almost exclusively in turacos. Turacoverdin is one of the only true green pigments found in birds, as the coloration that appears in most green feathers is due to the unique properties of blue structural coloration in combination with yellow carotenoids. Turacoverdin and turacin were the first ever chemically characterized feather pigments, and turacoverdin was first isolated and described in 1882 by Dr. C.F.W. Krukenberg.

Few studies into the chemical nature of turacoverdin have been performed to date. Research by R.E. Moreau in the 1950s showed it to be less soluble in basic solutions than its chemical cousin turacin. While originally thought to contain little copper by its discoverer, who instead believed it to be iron-based, later spectroscopic analysis demonstrated high copper (and low iron) content in pigment from the green feathers of the Knysna turaco and the Schalow's turaco. Moreau also demonstrated that the green coloration of turacos might actually be due to the combined effect of two different turacoverdin pigments that differ slightly in polarity.

When extracted and exposed to light, oxygen, or strong bases, turacin has been shown to take on a green hue. This has caused several researchers to suggest that turacoverdin may be an oxidized metabolite of turacin. This has been supported by data comparing the absorption bands of the "altered turacin" with those of turacoverdin, which are shown to be very similar to one another. Several researchers have noted the chemical similarities between turacin and turacoverdin. This relationship has been supported by spectral properties, the fact that both pigments contain copper, their similar microscopic arrangement in feather cells, and the co-occurrence of the pigments: turacin and turacoverdin are always found together in the same species, and in many cases are also found in the same plumage locations. The green appearance of turacoverdin can be derived from its absorbance curve, which peaks at blue wavelengths and in the long-wave range above yellow. Turacoverdin shows little UV reflectance.


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