AI Article Synopsis

  • Some animals can hide their bright colors and only show them for a short time to scare off or confuse predators.
  • Scientists did experiments to see how these hidden colors help the animals survive better against predators that already know they shouldn't eat them.
  • They discovered that animals with hidden signals are more common later in the season than those without hidden colors.

Article Abstract

Some camouflaged animals hide colour signals and display them only transiently. These hidden colour signals are often conspicuous and are used as a secondary defence to warn or startle predators (deimatic displays) and/or to confuse them (flash displays). The hidden signals used in these displays frequently resemble typical aposematic signals, so it is possible that prey with hidden signals have evolved to employ colour patterns of a form that predators have previously learned to associate with unprofitability. Here, we tested this hypothesis by conducting two experiments that examined the effect of predator avoidance learning on the efficacy of deimatic and flash displays. We found that the survival benefits of both deimatic and flash displays were substantially higher against predators that had previously learned to associate the hidden colours with unprofitability than against naive predators. These findings help explain the phenological patterns we found in 1568 macro-lepidopteran species on three continents: species with hidden signals tend to occur later in the season than species without hidden signals.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7542798PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2020.1894DOI Listing

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