Search results for "Plasticine"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Comments on Guimarães & Sawaya. Pretending to be venomous: is a snake's head shape a trustworthy signal to a predator?

2011

Several species of non-venomous snake are known to flatten their heads when disturbed, and this behaviour has been suggested to be a mimicry of vipers (Arnold & Ovenden 2002, Hailey & Davies 1986, Young et al. 1999). Using plasticine models, Guimaraes & Sawaya (2011) tested the antipredatory function of a triangular head shape in snakes. Their article presents the first published empirical experiment testing the adaptive significance of vipers’ triangular head shape. Guimaraes & Sawaya (2011) found no support for the viper mimicry hypothesis. Accordingly, they concluded that ‘the shape of [the] head seemed not to confer advantage itself’. Although the use of plasticine models is a generally…

TrustworthinessVIPeREcologylawForagingMimicryPlasticineSnake's headBiologyPredatorEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicslaw.inventionPredationJournal of Tropical Ecology
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Significance of the dorsal zigzag pattern of Vipera latastei gaditana against avian predators

2005

Summary 1. Aposematism is an antipredatory strategy in which prey animals conspicuously signal their noxiousness to potential predators. This successful strategy is based on avoidance learning of predators. 2. Most species in the viperid genus Vipera have a characteristic dorsal zigzag pattern. It has previously been suggested that the dorsal zigzag pattern of Vipera berus (the adder) has a cryptic function and thus makes the snake less conspicuous to avian predators. However, a recent experiment suggested that the pattern may function as an aposematic signal rather than being cryptic, and therefore induces active avoidance in avian predators. 3. We conducted a field experiment in Donana na…

biologyVipera berusEcologyOphidiaZoologyAposematismbiology.organism_classificationPredationlaw.inventionDisruptive colorationViperalawAnimal Science and ZoologyPlasticineVipera latasteiEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Animal Ecology
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The carabid Pterostichus melanarius uses chemical cues for opportunistic predation and saprophagy but not for finding healthy prey

2017

The sentinel prey method can quantify predation pressure in various habitats. Real prey is assumed to more realistically mimic the predator experience but the predator can rarely be identified. Artificial prey made of plasticine may lack real chemical cues, but provides information about predator identity. However, the relationship between predation pressure registered by artificial versus real prey is not clear. We tested the relative attractiveness of artificial caterpillars, and intact, wounded, or dead larvae of the cabbage moth (Mamestra brassicae) for the carabid predator Pterostichus melanarius Illiger (Coleoptera: Carabidae). P. melanarius adults were attracted to dead caterpillars …

insect behaviour0106 biological sciencesArtificial caterpillar Choice test Ground beetle Insect behaviour Scavenging Sentinel prey010603 evolutionary biology01 natural scienceslaw.inventionPredationground beetleSaprophagylawCabbage mothartificial caterpillarCaterpillarPredatorLarvabiologyEcologychoice testscavengingbiology.organism_classificationsentinel prey010602 entomologyAnimal ecologyInsect SciencePlasticineAgronomy and Crop Science
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