Cryptically colored animals commonly occur in several distinct pattern variants. Such phenotypic diversity may be promoted by frequency-dependent predation, in which more abundant variants are attacked disproportionately often, but the hypothesis has never been explicitly tested. Here we report the first controlled experiment on the effects of visual predators on prey crypticity and phenotypic variance, in which blue jays (Cyanocitta cristata) searched for digital moths on computer monitors. Moth phenotypes evolved via a genetic algorithm in which individuals detected by the jays were much less likely to reproduce. Jays often failed to detect atypical cryptic moths, confirming frequency- dependent selection and suggesting the use of searchi...
Apostatic selection (frequency-dependent selection by predators) has been demonstrated in several st...
Warning signals are predicted to develop signal monomorphism via positive frequency-dependent select...
Aposematic organisms avoid predation by advertising defences with warning signals. The theory of a...
Cryptically colored animals commonly occur in several distinct pattern variants. Such phenotypic div...
Apostatic selection, in which predators overlook rare prey types while consuming an excess of abunda...
Cryptically colored prey species are often polymorphic, occurring in multiple distinctive pattern va...
Cryptically colored prey species are often polymorphic, occurring in mul-tiple distinctive pattern v...
The development and maintenance of color polymorphism in cryptic prey species is a source of endurin...
Insect-eating birds can use searching images to detect cryptic prey. That is, they can learn what th...
Background: Animal colour patterns offer good model systems for studies of biodiversity and evolutio...
There is good experimental evidence that predators often remove more of common prey types. This apos...
Blue jays trained to detect Catocala moths in slides were exposed to two types of slide series conta...
Blue jays learned to respond differentially to the presence or absence of Catocala moths in slides. ...
The relationship between the perceptual and cognitive abilities of predatory birds and the appearanc...
Apostatic selection (frequency-dependent selection by predators) has been demonstrated in several st...
Warning signals are predicted to develop signal monomorphism via positive frequency-dependent select...
Aposematic organisms avoid predation by advertising defences with warning signals. The theory of a...
Cryptically colored animals commonly occur in several distinct pattern variants. Such phenotypic div...
Apostatic selection, in which predators overlook rare prey types while consuming an excess of abunda...
Cryptically colored prey species are often polymorphic, occurring in multiple distinctive pattern va...
Cryptically colored prey species are often polymorphic, occurring in mul-tiple distinctive pattern v...
The development and maintenance of color polymorphism in cryptic prey species is a source of endurin...
Insect-eating birds can use searching images to detect cryptic prey. That is, they can learn what th...
Background: Animal colour patterns offer good model systems for studies of biodiversity and evolutio...
There is good experimental evidence that predators often remove more of common prey types. This apos...
Blue jays trained to detect Catocala moths in slides were exposed to two types of slide series conta...
Blue jays learned to respond differentially to the presence or absence of Catocala moths in slides. ...
The relationship between the perceptual and cognitive abilities of predatory birds and the appearanc...
Apostatic selection (frequency-dependent selection by predators) has been demonstrated in several st...
Warning signals are predicted to develop signal monomorphism via positive frequency-dependent select...
Aposematic organisms avoid predation by advertising defences with warning signals. The theory of a...