AI Article Synopsis

  • - Flight innovation in insects, particularly in neotropical heliconiine butterflies, is influenced by complex interactions between environmental and biological factors, complicating the understanding of its evolution.
  • - A study of 351 butterflies revealed that flight patterns, such as wing beat frequency and angles, vary by color pattern mimicry affiliations, suggesting different flight components face different evolutionary pressures.
  • - The findings indicate that predator-driven mimicry significantly influences flight characteristics and can lead to behavioral mimicry even between species that have diverged over tens of millions of years.

Article Abstract

Flight was a key innovation in the adaptive radiation of insects. However, it is a complex trait influenced by a large number of interacting biotic and abiotic factors, making it difficult to unravel the evolutionary drivers. We investigate flight patterns in neotropical heliconiine butterflies, well known for mimicry of their aposematic wing color patterns. We quantify the flight patterns (wing beat frequency and wing angles) of 351 individuals representing 29 heliconiine and 9 ithomiine species belonging to ten color pattern mimicry groupings. For wing beat frequency and up wing angles, we show that heliconiine species group by color pattern mimicry affiliation. Convergence of down wing angles to mimicry groupings is less pronounced, indicating that distinct components of flight are under different selection pressures and constraints. The flight characteristics of the Tiger mimicry group are particularly divergent due to convergence with distantly related ithomiine species. Predator-driven selection for mimicry also explained variation in flight among subspecies, indicating that this convergence can occur over relatively short evolutionary timescales. Our results suggest that the flight convergence is driven by aposematic signaling rather than shared habitat between comimics. We demonstrate that behavioral mimicry can occur between lineages that have separated over evolutionary timescales ranging from <0.5 to 70 My.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10945825PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2300886121DOI Listing

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