Date: February 24, 2017
Source: University of Freiburg
The masquerade is almost perfect.
Certain moths of the subfamily Arctiinae are marked with a yellow and black
pattern. But these day-active insects have wasp waists and their antennae
resemble those of wasps. Their transparent wings are folded in a wasp-like way.
For more than 150 years there has been a plausible explanation for this type of
imitation, which is commonly known as mimicry. It says that the moths -- just
like many hoverflies and other insects -- imitate wasps in order to protect
themselves from birds and other hostile predators. According to textbook
wisdom, these voracious foes have learned from painful experience.
They have been stung by wasps and
since then have avoided any animal that looks like one. In the scientific
journal Ecology and Evolution, a University of Freiburg biologist, Prof. Dr. Michael
Boppré and his team have now presented an additional hypothesis that goes
beyond this traditional view. Their interpretation is that, above all, the
moths' appearance deceives the very wasps they are mimicking.
As a rule, insects developing
imperfect similarity to wasps is enough to keep learning predators at a
distance. Yet the Arctiinae that Boppré observed during his biodiversity
studies in South and Central America are different. The biologist says,
"Especially when they are in flight, even for the trained eye it's nearly
impossible to tell apart the examples from the mimics." That led Boppré to
question why these Arctiinae have evolved this near-perfect imitation and what
creatures they are trying to deceive. He says, "The answer -- wasps -- is
stunningly simple." Wasps hunt other insects as food for their larvae. Yet
wasps do not attack each other, even when they are out on hunting flights they
do not differentiate the wasps they encounter as originating from their own or
other nests. The moths, therefore, are imitating the wasps so that these
predators will perceive them as members of the same species and not attack for
that reason.
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