Search results for "Satyrinae"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

Significance of butterfly eyespots as an anti-predator device in ground-based and aerial attacks

2003

Many butterfly genera are characterised by the presence of marginal eyespots on their wings. One hypothesis to account for an occurrence of eyespots is that these wing pattern elements are partly the outcome of visual selection by predators. Bicyclus anynana (Satyrinae) has underside spotting on its wings but there is also a seasonal form in which the eyespots are reduced in size or totally absent. This natural variation gives us a useful tool to test the hypothesis that marginal eyespot patterns can decoy the attacking predator by, at least sometimes, diverting attack from vital body parts to the edges of the wings. We used lizards, Anolis carolinensis, and pied flycatchers, Ficedula hypol…

SatyrinaebiologyEcologyButterflyFicedulaZoologyEyespotBicyclus anynanabiology.organism_classificationNymphalidaeEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsAnolisPredationOikos
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Forests as dispersal barriers for Erebia medusa (Nymphalidae, Lepidoptera)

2000

Summary The nymphalid butterfly Erebia medusa is a typical species of meadows that are poor in nitrogen and fallow land. In forests, it is only found on clearings with meadow-like structures. However, it is missing on wind exposed places, too. 239 imagoes of E. medusa were sampled in the Aggtelek Karst region (north-eastern Hungary) at six different localities at the end of May 1997. The sample sizes varied between 33 and 46. The studied karst area has a typical forest steppe vegetation and is characterised by a mosaic-like distribution of meadows and forests. The sampled butterflies were analysed by allozyme electrophoresis. The level of polymorphism was significantly higher in the samples…

SatyrinaebiologyGenetic distanceEcologyErebia medusaButterflyGenetic structureBiological dispersalbiology.organism_classificationNymphalidaeEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsIsolation by distanceBasic and Applied Ecology
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