Abstract
AbstractFlash displays describe the sudden revealing of a conspicuous signal by an otherwise cryptic animal as it is fleeing from predators. One hypothesis for flash displays is that they have evolved to mislead predators into adopting an inappropriate search strategy following pursuit. Thus, if predators believe that the fleeing prey item will also be conspicuous when settled, then they will tend to give up searching sooner if they fail to find it. Naturally, if this hypothesis is correct then one might expect that the value of the flash display would cease once predators learn the flasher’s true resting appearance. However, even if predators are aware that the resting appearance of the signaller could be cryptic, flash displays will still be selected for if the flasher resembles another species that maintains its conspicuous appearance throughout. Motivated by this insight, we quantified the degree of chromatic and behavioral resemblance between the Carolina grasshopper (Dissosteira carolina) and mourning cloak butterfly (Nymphalis antiopa), a sympatric species with which it is commonly confused. The close similarity in both morphology and flight behavior (in the field and lab) between these distantly related species strongly suggests that they are in a mimetic relationship. It is unclear why this mimicry has evolved. One explanation is that mimicry has arisen through selection to maintain the efficacy of the flash display through search disruption even after predator learning. Another possibility is that the grasshopper has evolved to resemble the butterfly because the latter is harder to catch (evasive mimicry). However, we argue that pursuit and search disruption are entirely complementary explanations for the mimetic resemblance because they interfere with predation at two different stages of the attack sequence.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Reference50 articles.
1. Edmunds M . Defence in Animals: a Survey of Anti-predator Defences. Essex (UK): Longman; 1974.
2. Edmunds M . Flash colors. In: Capinera JL , editor. Encyclopedia of Entomology. Dordrecht (NL): Springer; 2008. p. 1466.
3. Cott H . Adaptive Coloration in Animals. London (UK): Methuen and Co., Ltd.; 1940.
4. Dynamic mimicry in an Indo–Malayan octopus
5. Contrasting coloured ventral wings are a visual collision avoidance signal in birds