1. The appearance of mimetic Heliconius butterflies to predators and conspecifics
- Author
-
Martin Stevens, W. Owen McMillan, Denise Dalbosco Dell'Aglio, Jolyon Troscianko, and Chris D. Jiggins
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Male ,Food Chain ,genetic structures ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Zoology ,mating behavior ,Aposematism ,avian vision ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Predation ,butterfly vision ,Courtship ,Birds ,03 medical and health sciences ,Sexual Behavior, Animal ,opsin ,Perception ,Genetics ,Heliconius ,Animals ,Wings, Animal ,Mating ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,media_common ,biology ,Pigmentation ,Biological Mimicry ,Original Articles ,UV light ,biology.organism_classification ,eye diseases ,030104 developmental biology ,Butterfly ,Mimicry ,Female ,Original Article ,Cues ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Butterflies ,Color Perception - Abstract
Adaptive coloration is under conflicting selection pressures: choosing potential mates and warning signaling against visually guided predators. Different elements of the color signal may therefore be tuned by evolution for different functions. We investigated how mimicry in four pairs of Heliconius comimics is potentially seen both from the perspective of butterflies and birds. Visual sensitivities of eight candidate avian predators were predicted through genetic analysis of their opsin genes. Using digital image color analysis, combined with bird and butterfly visual system models, we explored how predators and conspecifics may visualize mimetic patterns. Ultraviolet vision (UVS) birds are able to discriminate between the yellow and white colors of comimics better than violet vision (VS) birds. For Heliconius vision, males and females differ in their ability to discriminate comimics. Female vision and red filtering pigments have a significant effect on the perception of the yellow forewing band and the red ventral forewing pattern. A behavioral experiment showed that UV cues are used in mating behavior; removal of such cues was associated with an increased tendency to approach comimics as compared to conspecifics. We have therefore shown that visual signals can act to both reduce the cost of confusion in courtship and maintain the advantages of mimicry.
- Published
- 2017