Publication | Closed Access
Masquerade: Camouflage Without Crypsis
282
Citations
5
References
2009
Year
EngineeringInedible ObjectPredator-prey InteractionEntomologyVisual ArtsComputer-generated ImageryEmpirical DemonstrationInterspecific Behavioral InteractionAvian PredatorParasitologyIntraguild PredationVisual CultureNon-photorealistic RenderingBiologyForagingNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologySymbiosisVisibilityBiotic InteractionAnimal Behavior
Masquerade describes the resemblance of an organism to an inedible object and is hypothesized to facilitate misidentification of that organism by its predators or its prey. To date, there has been no empirical demonstration of the benefits of masquerade. Here, we show that two species of caterpillar obtain protection from an avian predator by being misidentified as twigs. By manipulating predators' previous experience of the putative model but keeping their exposure to the masquerader the same, we determined that predators misidentify masquerading prey as their models, rather than simply failing to detect them.
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