Artigo Revisado por pares

Mimicry-related Predation on Two Viceroy Butterfly (Limenitis archippus) Phenotypes

1998; University of Notre Dame; Volume: 140; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1674/0003-0031(1998)140[0001

ISSN

1938-4238

Autores

David B. Ritland,

Tópico(s)

Ecology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies

Resumo

In the eastern United States, the mimetic viceroy butterfly (Limenitis archippus) exhibits clinal variation in wing color, ranging from a tawny orange phenotype (L. a. archippus) in the N to a dark mahogany phenotype (L. a. floridensis) in Florida. Geographic distributions of these two subspecies are roughly coincident with the ranges of the viceroy's two eastern mimicry models: the monarch (Danaus plexippus) in the N, and the queen (D. gilippus) in the S. This coincidence has historically been attributed to “model-switching”: presumably, southern viceroys have switched from mimicking the monarch to mimicking the locally predominant queen, due to selective pressure exerted by visually foraging predators. As an initial test of this hypothesis, I sought evidence of selective predation on light and dark viceroys by captive red-winged blackbirds previously exposed to either monarchs or queens. Results were consistent with the model-switching hypothesis: queen-conditioned birds preferentially avoided the dark, queen-like L. a. floridensis, whereas birds exposed to monarchs avoided (to a lesser degree) the light L. a. archippus phenotype. I propose that this differential predation, while perhaps asymmetrical, demonstrates the selective mechanism responsible for the evolution of regional viceroy races, and that geographic model-switching explains the large-scale modern-day correlation between Danaus biogeography and viceroy wing color.

Referência(s)
Altmetric
PlumX