The University of Liverpool, UK.
Biol Lett. 2010 Dec 23;6(6):732-5. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2010.0207. Epub 2010 May 5.
In 1879, Fritz Müller hypothesized that mimetic resemblance in which defended prey display the same warning signal would share the costs of predator education. Although Müller argued that predators would need to ingest a fixed number of prey with a given visual signal when learning to avoid unpalatable prey, this assumption lacks empirical support. We report an experiment which shows that, as the number of unpalatable prey presented to them increased, avian predators attacked higher numbers of those prey. We calculated that, when predators increase attacks, the fitness costs incurred by unpalatable prey can be substantial. This suggests that the survival benefits of mimicry could be lower than Müller proposed. An important finding is, however, that these costs decline in importance as the total number of available prey increases.
1879 年,弗里茨·米勒(Fritz Müller)假设,在防御性猎物表现出相同警告信号的拟态相似性中,防御者和被捕食者将分担捕食者教育的成本。尽管米勒认为,当捕食者学习避免不可口的猎物时,它们需要摄入一定数量的具有特定视觉信号的猎物,但这一假设缺乏经验支持。我们报告了一项实验,该实验表明,随着呈现给鸟类捕食者的不可口猎物数量的增加,它们攻击的数量也会增加。我们计算得出,当捕食者增加攻击时,不可口猎物所产生的适应成本可能相当大。这表明,拟态的生存益处可能低于米勒提出的假设。然而,一个重要的发现是,随着可用猎物总数的增加,这些成本的重要性会降低。