Background: Animal colour patterns offer good model systems for studies of biodiversity and evolution of local adaptations. An increasingly popular approach to study the role of selection for camouflage for evolutionary trajectories of animal colour patterns is to present images of prey on paper or computer screens to human 'predators'. Yet, few attempts have been made to confirm that rates of detection by humans can predict patterns of selection and evolutionary modifications of prey colour patterns in nature. In this study, we first analyzed encounters between human 'predators' and images of natural black, grey and striped colour morphs of the polymorphic Tetrix subulata pygmy grasshoppers presented on background images of unburnt, interm...
The selection of prey by predators should, theoretically, favour uniformity in the warning signals d...
Behavior can play a key role in adaptation, especially in novel environments. Here we study how grou...
1. Although background matching decreases prey detectability, resemblance between camouflaged prey a...
Cryptic colouration can be adjusted to the local environment by physiological (rapid) change, and/or...
Colour-marking polymorphism is widely distributed among cryptic species. To account for the adaptive...
The existence of melanistic (black) color forms in many species represents interesting model systems...
Cryptic coloration is an adaptative defensive mechanism against predators. Color patterns can become...
Several lines of indirect evidence suggest that selection imposed by predators may favor certain com...
Most animals including humans use vision to detect, identify, evaluate and respond to potential prey...
Orthopteran insects are characterized by high variability in body coloration, in particular featurin...
Cryptically colored prey species are often polymorphic, occurring in multiple distinctive pattern va...
Cryptically colored animals commonly occur in several distinct pattern variants. Such phenotypic div...
There is good experimental evidence that predators often remove more of common prey types. This apos...
Homochromy (i.e. that individuals have a similar color as their environment) is frequent in grasshop...
The selection of prey by predators should, theoretically, favour uniformity in the warning signals d...
Behavior can play a key role in adaptation, especially in novel environments. Here we study how grou...
1. Although background matching decreases prey detectability, resemblance between camouflaged prey a...
Cryptic colouration can be adjusted to the local environment by physiological (rapid) change, and/or...
Colour-marking polymorphism is widely distributed among cryptic species. To account for the adaptive...
The existence of melanistic (black) color forms in many species represents interesting model systems...
Cryptic coloration is an adaptative defensive mechanism against predators. Color patterns can become...
Several lines of indirect evidence suggest that selection imposed by predators may favor certain com...
Most animals including humans use vision to detect, identify, evaluate and respond to potential prey...
Orthopteran insects are characterized by high variability in body coloration, in particular featurin...
Cryptically colored prey species are often polymorphic, occurring in multiple distinctive pattern va...
Cryptically colored animals commonly occur in several distinct pattern variants. Such phenotypic div...
There is good experimental evidence that predators often remove more of common prey types. This apos...
Homochromy (i.e. that individuals have a similar color as their environment) is frequent in grasshop...
The selection of prey by predators should, theoretically, favour uniformity in the warning signals d...
Behavior can play a key role in adaptation, especially in novel environments. Here we study how grou...
1. Although background matching decreases prey detectability, resemblance between camouflaged prey a...