Mimicry can impact a species' survival and fitness by increasing the species' ability to deter predators. Coloration is an integral component of mimicry, yet morphology may also influence mimicry success. Although bird predators are able to discern shapes and can associate palatability with prey shape, little is known about the deterrence of predators if the prey is exclusively a morphological mimic. To examine a mimic's potential to deter bird predators based soley on morphology, we presented free-foraging birds visiting a feeder with two types of artificial prey: white unpalatable worms and white palatable spheres. We observed the birds' preference for the two shapes over a seven day period. After the first day, the birds showed a signifi...
The theory of mimicry explains how a mimic species gains advantage by resembling a model species . S...
Most research on aposematism has focused on chemically defended prey, but the signaling difficulty o...
There is good experimental evidence that predators often remove more of common prey types. This apos...
Several of the most celebrated examples of visual mimicry, like mimetic eggs laid by avian brood par...
Mimicry occurs when one species gains protection from predators by resembling an unprofitable model ...
The nature of signal mimicry between defended prey (known as Müllerian mimicry) is controversial. So...
Müllerian mimicry, where unpalatable prey share common warning patterns, has long fascinated evolut...
Müllerian mimicry describes the close resemblance between aposematic prey species; it is thought to ...
Field experiments have shown that avian predators in the wild can select for similarity of warning s...
Batesian mimicry is one of many methods prey species have evolved to increase their fitness. This t...
Batesian mimicry is an antipredator strategy used by harmless species to mimic dangerous models by t...
Conspicuous warning coloration helps to protect prey because it signals to potential predators that ...
Batesian mimicry evolution entails an initial major mutation that produces a rough resemblance to th...
The theory of mimicry explains how a mimic species gains advantage by resembling a model species . S...
Most research on aposematism has focused on chemically defended prey, but the signaling difficulty o...
There is good experimental evidence that predators often remove more of common prey types. This apos...
Several of the most celebrated examples of visual mimicry, like mimetic eggs laid by avian brood par...
Mimicry occurs when one species gains protection from predators by resembling an unprofitable model ...
The nature of signal mimicry between defended prey (known as Müllerian mimicry) is controversial. So...
Müllerian mimicry, where unpalatable prey share common warning patterns, has long fascinated evolut...
Müllerian mimicry describes the close resemblance between aposematic prey species; it is thought to ...
Field experiments have shown that avian predators in the wild can select for similarity of warning s...
Batesian mimicry is one of many methods prey species have evolved to increase their fitness. This t...
Batesian mimicry is an antipredator strategy used by harmless species to mimic dangerous models by t...
Conspicuous warning coloration helps to protect prey because it signals to potential predators that ...
Batesian mimicry evolution entails an initial major mutation that produces a rough resemblance to th...
The theory of mimicry explains how a mimic species gains advantage by resembling a model species . S...
Most research on aposematism has focused on chemically defended prey, but the signaling difficulty o...
There is good experimental evidence that predators often remove more of common prey types. This apos...