This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.Mimics should not exist without their models, yet often they do. In the system involving queen and viceroy butterflies, the viceroy is both mimic and co-model depending on the local abundance of the model, the queen. Here, we integrate population surveys, chemical analyses, and predator behavior assays to demonstrate how mimics may persist in locations with low-model abundance. As the queen becomes less locally abundant, the viceroy becomes more chemically defended and unpalatable to predators. However, the observed changes in viceroy chemical defense and palatability are not attributable to differing host plant chemical defense profiles. Our results sugges...
Abstract Müllerian co-mimics are aposematic species that resemble each other; sharing a warning sign...
Some taxa have adopted the strategy of mimicry to protect themselves from predation. Butterflies are...
Abstract The viceroy–monarch and viceroy–queen butterfly associations are classic examples of mimicr...
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.Mimics should n...
Despite more than a century of biological research on the evolution and maintenance of mimetic signa...
International audienceMüllerian mimicry between chemically defended species arises from selection ex...
The study of aposematic coloration and mimicry has a long and distinguished history, and has stimula...
Batesian mimicry is characterized by phenotypic convergence between an unpalatable model and a palat...
Batesian mimicry is characterized by phenotypic convergence between an unpalatable model and a palat...
International audienceBackground: Aposematic species advertise their unpalatability using warning si...
Some taxa have adopted the strategy of mimicry to protect themselves from predation. Butterflies are...
The evolution of mimicry in similarly defended prey is well described by Müllerian mimicry theory, w...
Kikuchi DW, Barfield M, Herberstein ME, Mappes J, Holt RD. The Effect of Predator Population Dynamic...
Some taxa have adopted the strategy of mimicry to protect themselves from predation. Butterflies are...
Since the phenomenon of mimicry was first described by Bates in 1862 it has become one of the founda...
Abstract Müllerian co-mimics are aposematic species that resemble each other; sharing a warning sign...
Some taxa have adopted the strategy of mimicry to protect themselves from predation. Butterflies are...
Abstract The viceroy–monarch and viceroy–queen butterfly associations are classic examples of mimicr...
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.Mimics should n...
Despite more than a century of biological research on the evolution and maintenance of mimetic signa...
International audienceMüllerian mimicry between chemically defended species arises from selection ex...
The study of aposematic coloration and mimicry has a long and distinguished history, and has stimula...
Batesian mimicry is characterized by phenotypic convergence between an unpalatable model and a palat...
Batesian mimicry is characterized by phenotypic convergence between an unpalatable model and a palat...
International audienceBackground: Aposematic species advertise their unpalatability using warning si...
Some taxa have adopted the strategy of mimicry to protect themselves from predation. Butterflies are...
The evolution of mimicry in similarly defended prey is well described by Müllerian mimicry theory, w...
Kikuchi DW, Barfield M, Herberstein ME, Mappes J, Holt RD. The Effect of Predator Population Dynamic...
Some taxa have adopted the strategy of mimicry to protect themselves from predation. Butterflies are...
Since the phenomenon of mimicry was first described by Bates in 1862 it has become one of the founda...
Abstract Müllerian co-mimics are aposematic species that resemble each other; sharing a warning sign...
Some taxa have adopted the strategy of mimicry to protect themselves from predation. Butterflies are...
Abstract The viceroy–monarch and viceroy–queen butterfly associations are classic examples of mimicr...