July 1st, 2013 in Biology / Plants & Animals
(Phys.org)
—Red on yellow, kill a fellow. Red on black, friend of Jack. That folk rhyme is
supposed to help people distinguish venomous coral snakes from several
non-venomous "mimics," animals that discourage predators by
deceptively imitating a dangerous species.
Problem is, the rhyme is unreliable due to the vast
amount of color and pattern variation, called color polymorphism, found in both
coral snakes and their mimics. The harmless ground snake, a common coral
snake mimic, displays four strikingly different color patterns, only one of
which closely resembles its dangerous red-and-black-and-yellow-banded
counterpart.
If a mimicry system offers protection from
predators, then why hasn't evolution eliminated the "failed mimics,"
such as ground snakes sporting color patterns that don't remotely resemble a
coral snake? That's the puzzle that University
of Michigan evolutionary
biologist Alison Davis Rabosky has spent the last four years trying to
solve.
"Logic predicts that non-mimics should by
eaten preferentially by predators and, given enough time, you should end up
with a single color type in the population. So the widespread co-occurrence of
mimic and non-mimic color patterns is a puzzling and longstanding evolutionary
paradox," said Rabosky, an assistant research scientist in the Department
of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and an assistant curator of herpetology
at the Museum of Zoology .
While Rabosky and colleague Christian L. Cox of the
University of Virginia don't claim to have fully
resolved the paradox, they did gain insights that help explain the persistence
of non-mimic color patterns in ground snakes, especially rare patterns. It
turns out that if you're a ground snake, displaying a rare color pattern also
provides an evolutionary edge.
Rabosky and Cox spent years flipping thousands of rocks
in search of ground snakes in the central and western United States and in Mexico . They collected more than
350 live ground snakes and studied some 2,500 specimens from 12 museum
collections.
A single population of ground snakes can contain
individuals with four different color patterns, called morphs: plain brown, red
striped, black banded, and the red-and-black-banded "mimic morph,"
which resembles the coral snake.
Some of the museum specimens examined by Rabosky
and Cox date back more than a century. By tracing changes in color patterns
within populations over time, they determined that the rarest color morph in a
given population gradually became more common.
"Basically the predators get a search image
for the most common morph in that population, and that's the one they'll hit
until that morph becomes rare. Then the predators switch to whatever is now the
most common morph," Rabosky said.
Predators of ground snakes include hawks and other
raptors, crows and ravens, and blue jays. Ground snakes typically grow to a
length of around 8 inches.
"This is what's called a frequency-dependent
system, and it makes it hard to lose any of these morphs once they
appear," Rabosky said. "The rare morphs have an advantage because
they are rare, so gradually their numbers will start to increase again, and the
end result is a system with a lot of polymorphism."
Specifically, Rabosky and Cox found that negative
frequency-dependent selection, in which each color type is favored only when it
is rare, is the primary reason there are multiple color patterns in ground
snakes. Their findings were published online June 26 in The American
Naturalist.
Rabosky said the study is the first rigorous test,
in a snake mimicry system with color polymorphism, of how the frequencies of morphs
change over time and how natural selection is operating on the different color
patterns.
Rare morphs have an advantage over common morphs,
and mimic morphs gain some protection that non-mimics lack. Toss in the fact
that some ground snakes live side by side with coral snakes while other
populations are hundreds of miles from the nearest coral snake, and you've got
a complex system where untangling the details of color polymorphism is a
formidable challenge.
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