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- THE GREAT IMPOSTERS
-
- Finding good day care can certainly pose a problem these days, unless, of
- course, you're an African widow bird. When it comes time for a female widow
- bird to lay her eggs, she simply locates the nest of a nearby Estrildid
- finch and surreptitiously drops the eggs inside.
- That's the last the widow bird ever sees of her offspring. But not to
- worry, because the Estrildid finch will take devoted care of the abandoned
- birds as if they were her own.
- And who's to tell the difference? Though adult widow birds and
- Estrildid finches don't look at all alike, their eggs do. Not only that,
- baby widow birds are dead ringers for Estrildid finch chicks, both having
- the same colouration and markings. They even act and sound the same,
- thus ensuring that the widow bird nestlings can grow up among their alien
- nestmates with no risk of being rejected by their foster parents.
-
- MASTERS OF DISGUISE
-
- Things aren't always as they seem, and nowhere is this more true than
- in nature, where dozens of animals (and plants) spend their time
- masquerading as others. So clever are their disguises that you've
- probably never known you were being fooled by spiders impersonating ants,
- squirrels that look like shrews, worms copying sea anemones, and roaches
- imitating ladybugs. There are even animals that look like themselves,
- which can also be a form of impersonation.
- The phenomenon of mimicry, as it's called by biologists, was first
- noted in the mid-1800s by an English naturalist, Henry W. Bates. Watching
- butterflies in the forests of Brazil, Bates discovered that many members
- of the Peridae butterfly family did not look anything like their closest
- relatives. Instead they bore a striking resemblance to members of the
- Heliconiidae butterfly family.
- Upon closer inspection, Bates found that there was a major advantage
- in mimicking the Heliconiids. Fragile, slow-moving and brightly coloured,
- the Heliconiids are ideal targets for insectivorous birds. Yet, birds
- never touch them because they taste so bad.
- Imagine that you're a delicious morsel of butterfly. Wouldn't it be
- smart to mimic the appearance of an unpalatable Heliconiid so that no
- bird would bother you either? That's what Bates concluded was happening in
- the Brazilian jungle among the Pieridae. Today, the imitation of an
- inedible species by an edible one is called Batesian mimicry.
- Since Bates' time, scientists have unmasked hundreds of cases of
- mimicry in nature. It hasn't always been an easy job, either, as when
- an animal mimics not one, but several other species. In one species of
- butterfly common in India and Sri Lanka, the female appears in no less than
- three versions. One type resembles the male while the others resemble two
- entirely different species of inedible butterflies.
- Butterflies don't "choose" to mimic other butterflies in the same way
- that you might pick out a costume for a masquerade ball. True, some
- animals, such as the chameleon, do possess the ability to change body
- colour and blend in the with their surroundings. But most mimicry arises
- through evolutionary change. A mutant appears with characteristics
- similar to that of a better protected animal. This extra protection offers
- the mutant the opportunity to reproduce unharmed, and eventually flourish
- alongside the original.
- In the world of mimics, the ant is another frequently copied animal,
- though not so much by other ants as by other insects and even spiders.
- Stoop down to inspect an ant colony, and chances are you'll find a few
- interlopers that aren't really ants at all but copycat spiders (or wasps
- or flies). One way you might distinguish between host and guest is by
- counting legs: Ants have six legs while spiders have eight. Look
- carefully and you might see a few spiders running around on six legs
- while holding their other two out front like ant feelers.
- COPYCATS
- Mimicry can not only be a matter of looking alike, it can also involve
- acting the same. In the Philippine jungle there is a nasty little bug,
- the bombardier beetle. When threatened by a predator, it sticks its back
- end in the air, like a souped-up sports car, and lets out a blast of
- poisonous fluid. In the same jungle lives a cricket that is a living
- xerox of the bombardier beetle. When approached by a predator, the
- cricket will also prop up its behind -- a tactic sufficient to scare
- off the enemy, even though no toxic liquid squirts out.
- Going one step further than that is a native of the United States,
- the longicorn beetle, which resembles the unappetizing soft-shelled
- beetle. Not content to merely look alike, the longicorn beetle will
- sometimes attack a soft-shelled beetle and devour part of its insides. By
- ingesting the soft-shelled beetle's bad-tasting body fluid, the longicorn
- beetle gives itself a terrible taste, too!
- Protection is by no means the only advantage that mimicry offers.
- Foster care can be another reward, as proven by the African widow bird.
- And then there's the old wolf-in-sheep's-clothing trick, which biologists
- call aggressive mimicry.
- The master practitioner of aggressive mimicry is the ocean-going
- anglerfish. Looking like a stone overgrown with algae, the anglerfish
- disguises itself among the rocks and slime on the ocean bottom.
- Protruding from its mouth is a small appendage, or lure, with all the
- features of a fat, juicy pink worm.
- The anglerfish lacks powerful teeth so it can't take a tight grip on
- its prey. Instead, it waits motionless until a small fish shows interest
- in the lure, and then wiggles the lure in front of the fish's mouth.
- When the small fish is just about to snap at the lure, the angler swallows
- violently, sucking the fish down its hatch. Diner instantly becomes
- dinner.
-
- SEXUAL IMITATORS
-
- Of all the many impostures found in nature, probably the sneakiest
- are those of the sexual mimics: males who imitate females to gain an
- advantage at mating time. Here in Ontario we have a sexual mimic, the
- bluegill fish. Male bluegills come in two types: the standard male and the
- satellite male, which looks just like a female bluegill.
- In preparation for mating, the standard male bluegill performs the
- job of building the nest, where he bides his time until a female enters it
- to spawn. Satellite fish don't build nests, choosing instead to hover
- around the nest of a standard male until the moment when a pregnant
- female enters. The satellite fish follows her into the nest, deceiving
- the nestbuilder into believing that he is now in the presence of two
- females. The three fish swim around together, and when the female drops
- her eggs, both males release a cloud of sperm. Some of the eggs are
- fertilized by the resident male, some by the satellite male,
- thus passing on passing on different sets of male genes to a new
- generation of bluegills.
- Another case of sexual mimicry has recently been uncovered in Manitoba
- among the red-sided garter snakes. The little town of Inwood, Manitoba and
- the surrounding countryside is garter snake heaven, where you can find the
- largest snake colonies on Earth.
- Every spring, the red-sided garter snake engages in a curious mating
- ritual. Soon after spring thaw, the males emerge first from their winter
- cave and hover nearby. The females then slither out a few at a time,
- each one exuding a special "perfume" which signals to the fellows that
- she's ready to mate. At first whiff of this lovely odour, a mass of
- frenetic males immediately besieges the female, wrapping her up in a
- "mating ball" of 10, 20 or sometimes as many as 100 writhing males, all
- hoping to get lucky.
- Scientists have now discovered that some male red-sided garters give
- off the same perfume as the female, and they do this while intertwined in
- the mating ball. Male and female red-sided garters look exactly alike, so
- the male with the female scent can effectively distract many of the males
- from the real female, giving the imposter a better shot at getting close
- to the female and impregnating her.
- Males passing as females, fish as bait, beetles as ants -- amidst all
- this confusion, it still sometimes pays to just be yourself, which could
- certainly be the motto of the amazing hair-streak butterfly family.
- Decorating the hair-streak's lower hind wings are spots that look like
- eyes, and out-growths that look like antennae, creating the illusion that
- the butterfly has a second head. Whenever the hair-streak alights, it
- jerks its dummy antennae up and down while keeping its real antennae
- immobile. Presumably, this dummy head exists to distract predators.
- If so, we finally have the first scientific proof that two heads are
- better than one.
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