0 the colours, or the patterns made by these colours, that are present on an animal or plant: --
The orchestra's performance is full of fresh detail and colouration.
The chart gives you a guide to the colouration of the particular beer you are ordering.
I have learnt the difference between piebald (black and white) and skewbald (brown and white) colourations.
Growing the plant in full sun ensures attractive leaf colouration.
Predators learn not to attack these frogs because of their bright colouration.
Usually, the term promises adaptive colouration, and hence the study of evolution, natural selection and, no doubt, polymorphism.
The expression of the nuptial colouration may consequently reflect the male's foraging ability, or else its capability of efficiently turning carotenoids into visual signals.
When the angle becomes larger, the virtual source gets spectrally more spread and more colourations occur.
The sole exception to this possibility would occur with a need to use colouration to signal rhythmic alteration.
The noise colouration of the tone is restricted in the physically present tube.
The character of that colouration was neither universal, nor uniform making some accounts more, and some less reliable.
If the brightest males are not consistently immunologically superior, the intensity of the breeding colouration may become positively associated with parasite burden.
There might still be a few damp patches, but these are immediately recognizable from the darker colouration of the surface.