Butterfly mimicry through the eyes of bird predators

Monday, November 9, 2015 - 04:25 in Biology & Nature

Wing color patterns of butterflies must perform different signalling functions to avoid predators and attract potential mates. In the natural world, mimicry isn't entertainment; it's a deadly serious game spanning a range of senses - sight, smell and hearing. Some of the most striking visual mimics are butterflies. Many butterflies become noxious and unpalatable to predators by acquiring chemical defences from plants they ingest as caterpillars. Other butterflies mimic the 'aposematic' or warning colouration and conspicuous wing patterns of these toxic or just plain foul-tasting butterflies.

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