| Literature DB >> 30991931 |
Melanie McClure1, Corentin Clerc1, Charlotte Desbois1, Aimilia Meichanetzoglou1,2, Marion Cau1, Lucie Bastin-Héline1,3, Javier Bacigalupo1, Céline Houssin1, Charline Pinna1, Bastien Nay2,4, Violaine Llaurens1, Serge Berthier5, Christine Andraud6, Doris Gomez7, Marianne Elias1.
Abstract
Defended species are often conspicuous and this is thought to be an honest signal of defences, i.e. more toxic prey are more conspicuous. Neotropical butterflies of the large Ithomiini tribe numerically dominate communities of chemically defended butterflies and may thus drive the evolution of mimetic warning patterns. Although many species are brightly coloured, most are transparent to some degree. The evolution of transparency from a warning-coloured ancestor is puzzling as it is generally assumed to be involved in concealment. Here, we show that transparent Ithomiini species are indeed less detectable by avian predators (i.e. concealment). Surprisingly, transparent species are not any less unpalatable, and may in fact be more unpalatable than opaque species, the latter spanning a larger range of unpalatability. We put forth various hypotheses to explain the evolution of weak aposematic signals in these butterflies and other cryptic defended prey. Our study is an important step in determining the selective pressures and constraints that regulate the interaction between conspicuousness and unpalatability.Keywords: Müllerian mimicry; conspicuousness; crypsis; detectability; honest signal; unpalatability
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30991931 PMCID: PMC6501930 DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2018.2769
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Biol Sci ISSN: 0962-8452 Impact factor: 5.349