Seed Media Group

Zooillogix

Don't Stick Your Fingers in the Cage

Search this blog

Video of the Week

Polar Bear and Dogs Playing

Bleiman Brothers Profile

isopod%201.jpg
In the wild, Andrew feeds on fish, sponges, small crustaceans, nematode worms and protozoans.

javanensis.GIF
Benny's diet is very specialized, consisting mainly of the interior of Ramy nuts, nectar from the Traveller's Palm tree, some fungi and insect grubs. He is also known to raid coconut plantations, and has been seen eating lychees and mangoes, which are also plantation crops.

Recent Posts

Recent Comments

Archives

Donate!

Blogroll



Look How Important We Are


Nature Blog Network

View blog authority

Add to Technorati Favorites



Science Blogs - Blog Catalog Blog Directory

Read the super-informative Interview with the Bleiman Brothers

World's Largest Zoo and Shot Glass Collection


Now accepting donations in exchange for recognition and fame on Zooillogix!

Zoo%20Shotglasses%20001.jpg
Currently Featured: Milwaukee and LA Zoos (and an extra mini Milly-wau-kay) thanks to Zooillogix reader extraordinaire, Julia C.

The List:
Adventure Aquarium
Baton Rouge Zoo
Birch Aquarium at Scripps
Bronx Zoo
Brookfield Zoo
Cincinnati Zoo
Cleveland Metroparks Zoo
Florida Aquarium
Georgia Aquarium
Knoxville Zoo
Lincoln Park Zoo
Los Angeles Zoo
Maritime Center in Norwalk, CT
Milwaukee Zoo
Monterey Bay Aquarium
Mystic Aquarium
New England Aquarium
New York Aquarium
Newport Aquarium
Philadelphia Zoo
Ripley's Aquarium of the Smokies
San Diego Zoo
San Francisco Zoo
Santa Barbara Zoo
Sea World San Diego
Shedd Aquarium
Smithsonian National Zoo
South Carolina Aquarium
Tennessee Aquarium
Feed me Seymour!

« Fat Animals with Accents | Main | Martial Zoo Law »

Butterflies Dupe Ants, Trigger "Smell" Race

Category: butterfly
Posted on: January 3, 2008 3:57 PM, by Benny Bleiman

A new scientific paper has shown a strange, deceptive adaptation in the Maculinea butterflies of North Western Europe--an adaptation that has caused a genetic race between the butterflies and many different species of ants. The butterflies' caterpillar larvae emit a powerful smell that tricks the ants into believing that they are in fact ant larvae. The ants then...

...carry the larvae back to their secret lairs, and feed them. Just like the famed cuckoo birds, the larvae trick the ants so effectively that the ants give up on taking care of their own brood to focus exclusively on the caterpillars.

In response to this invasion, however, ants from colonies that have been "parasited" by the butterflies have evolved to have a different odor than the butterflies, and thus are able to recognize the caterpillars as frauds.

Butterfly%201.jpg
DUN-dun-dun!

Butterfly%202.jpg
DUN-DUN-dun!!

Butterfly%203.jpg
DUN-DUN-DUN!!!

In their research David Nash, Jacobus Boomsma and others from the Centre for Social Evolution (CSE) at the University of Copenhagen show that colonies of ants which developed a resistance (a different smell) and then interbred with colonies who had not been exposed to the parasites lost their resistance as the genes were diluted. Of course, they then fell victim to the Maculinea butterflies again.

Caterpillar.jpg
The cuter brown grub is the Maculinea caterpillar

Comments

Once the ants start feeding the larvae and then forget about their own little guys, what happens next? Swarms of ninja butterflies then arrive, called by a top secret code radar emission by the trick larvae, to rape and pillage the unsuspecting and unprotected hoard of ants? I don't get it. This article doesn't make sense.

Posted by: Old Randy | January 6, 2008 3:05 PM

Or do the larvae just lie there and wait until the right moment when tiny pupa-razi bust out of the cocoon and start snapping pics of ant-larvae threesomes? I still don't get it.

Posted by: Old Randy | January 6, 2008 3:09 PM

Old Randy - How old are you? For instance, do you have teeth?

Posted by: Andrew | January 7, 2008 10:06 AM

Post a Comment

(Email is required for authentication purposes only. Comments are moderated for spam, your comment may not appear immediately. Thanks for waiting.)





Having problems commenting? (UPDATED)

Blogs in the Network

Advertisement

Top Five: Readers' Picks

Search All Blogs