State Key Laboratory of Biocatalysis and Enzyme Engineering, and Centre for Behavioural Ecology & Evolution, School of Life Sciences, Hubei University, Wuhan, Hubei 430062, China.
Wuhan Wuluolu Experimental Junior High School, Wuhan, Hubei 430070, China.
Zool Res. 2024 Nov 18;45(6):1201-1208. doi: 10.24272/j.issn.2095-8137.2024.025.
Animals deploy diverse color-based defenses against predators, including crypsis, mimicry, aposematism, and masquerade. While crypsis, mimicry, aposematism have been extensively studied, the strategy of masquerade-where organisms imitate inedible or inanimate objects such as leaves, twigs, stones, and bird droppings-remains comparatively underexplored, particularly in adult butterflies. The Indian oakleaf butterfly ( ) exemplifies this phenomenon, with its wings resembling dead leaves, providing a classic example of natural selection. Although it has long been postulated that these butterflies evade predation by being misidentified as dead leaves, direct experimental evidence is lacking. In the current study, using domestic chicks as predators, we manipulated their prior experience with dead leaves (model objects) while maintaining constant exposure to butterflies to test whether dead-leaf masquerade provides a protective advantage by preventing recognition. Results showed a marked delay in the initiation of attacks by chicks familiar with dead leaves compared to those with no prior exposure or those exposed to visually altered leaves. Chicks with prior dead-leaf experience required a similar amount of time to attack the butterflies as they did to attack dead leaves. These findings provide the first empirical demonstration of dead-leaf masquerade in butterflies, shedding light on its evolutionary significance. Our study highlights the effectiveness of masquerade in inducing the misclassification of butterflies as inanimate objects, showcasing the precise mimicry achieved by these organisms when viewed in isolation from the model objects. This study advances our understanding of the evolution of masquerade and its role as a potent antipredator strategy in nature.
动物利用多种基于颜色的防御策略来应对捕食者,包括伪装、拟态、警戒色和拟态。虽然伪装、拟态和警戒色已经得到了广泛的研究,但生物体模仿不可食用或无生命物体(如树叶、树枝、石头和鸟粪)的拟态策略仍然相对较少被探索,尤其是在成年蝴蝶中。印度栎叶蛱蝶()就是这种现象的一个典型例子,它的翅膀类似于枯叶,提供了自然选择的经典范例。尽管长期以来人们假设这些蝴蝶通过被误认为是枯叶来逃避捕食,但缺乏直接的实验证据。在当前的研究中,我们使用家鸡作为捕食者,操纵它们对枯叶(模型物体)的先前经验,同时保持对蝴蝶的持续暴露,以测试枯叶拟态是否通过防止识别提供保护优势。结果表明,与没有先前经验或暴露于视觉改变的树叶的小鸡相比,熟悉枯叶的小鸡发起攻击的时间明显延迟。有先前枯叶经验的小鸡攻击蝴蝶所需的时间与攻击枯叶所需的时间相似。这些发现首次提供了 蝴蝶中枯叶拟态的实证证据,揭示了其在进化上的重要意义。我们的研究强调了拟态在诱导蝴蝶被错误分类为无生命物体方面的有效性,展示了当这些生物体与模型物体分离时所实现的精确模拟。这项研究增进了我们对拟态进化及其作为自然界中一种强大的抗捕食策略的作用的理解。