Tech24 Deals Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the Tech24 Deals Content Network
  2. Müllerian mimicry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Müllerian_mimicry

    Müllerian mimicry was proposed by the German zoologist and naturalist Fritz Müller (1821–1897). An early proponent of evolution, Müller offered the first explanation for resemblance between certain butterflies that had puzzled the English naturalist Henry Walter Bates in 1862. Bates, like Müller, spent a significant part of his life in ...

  3. Batesian mimicry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Batesian_mimicry

    A non-Batesian species, Pseudopieris nehemia, is in the centre. Batesian mimicry is a form of mimicry where a harmless species has evolved to imitate the warning signals of a harmful species directed at a predator of them both. It is named after the English naturalist Henry Walter Bates, who worked on butterflies in the rainforests of Brazil.

  4. Mimicry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mimicry

    In evolutionary biology, mimicry is an evolved resemblance between an organism and another object, often an organism of another species. Mimicry may evolve between different species, or between individuals of the same species. In the simplest case, as in Batesian mimicry, a mimic resembles a model, so as to deceive a dupe, all three being of ...

  5. Mimicry in plants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mimicry_in_plants

    Bakerian mimicry, named after English naturalist Herbert Baker, [ 10] is a form of automimicry or intraspecific mimicry that occurs within a single species. In plants, the female flowers mimic male flowers of their own species, cheating pollinators out of a reward. This reproductive mimicry may not be readily apparent as members of the same ...

  6. Mimicry in vertebrates - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mimicry_in_vertebrates

    There are few well-studied examples of mimicry in vertebrates. [1] Still, many of the basic types of mimicry apply to vertebrates, especially among snakes. Batesian mimicry is rare among vertebrates but found in some reptiles (particularly snakes) and amphibians. [2] [3] Müllerian mimicry is found in some snakes, birds, amphibians, and fish.

  7. Deception in animals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deception_in_animals

    Deception in animals is the voluntary or involuntary transmission of misinformation by one animal to another, of the same or different species, in a way that misleads the other animal. Robert Mitchell identifies four levels of deception in animals. At the first level, as with protective mimicry like false eyespots and camouflage, the action or ...

  8. Viceroy (butterfly) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viceroy_(butterfly)

    Research has argued that the viceroy may be unpalatable to avian predators. If that is the case, then the viceroy butterfly displays Müllerian mimicry, and both viceroy and monarch are co-mimics of each other. [17] Some literature suggests that the queen-viceroy may not be a good model-mimic pair for Batesian mimicry.

  9. Aposematism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aposematism

    For example, the hornet moth is a deceptive mimic of the yellowjacket wasp; it resembles the wasp, but has no sting. A predator which avoids the wasp will to some degree also avoid the moth. This is known as Batesian mimicry, after Henry Walter Bates, a British naturalist who studied Amazonian butterflies in the second half of the 19th century ...