Animal Defense Vs Predators
Animal Defense Vs Predators
Animal Defense Vs Predators
TIP #2 for Chemical Ecology Phyllis Robinson, Keith Murphy and Melissa Greene
1. Chemical Defense
There are two main ways animals can use chemicals to defend themselves. Animals can synthesize toxin using their own metabolic processes, or they can accumulate toxin from the food they eat.
1. Chemical Defense
Animals which synthesize their own toxin are able to convert chemical compounds in their body to a poison. There are many amphibians that produce skin toxins. The skin toxins are produced by special poison glands, usually located on the animal's back or throughout the skin.
The poison dart frog has poison glands scattered all over its body.
1. Chemical Defense
In another example, the fire salamander makes a nerve poison, which it can squirt from glands on its back.
Photo courtesy of Henk Wallays, Cal. Acad. of Sciences.
1. Chemical Defense
Many animals accumulate toxin from their food rather than synthesizing it from scratch.
For example, the larvae of Monarch butterflies accumulate toxins from the plants they inhabit. Birds that eat the Monarchs vomit and learn to avoid them in the future. Their bright coloration allows birds to remember and avoid them.
1. Chemical Defense
Interestingly, many organisms which are distasteful advertise this fact to predators by having bright body colors or markings, as if to say, Notice me! Im dangerous!
1. Chemical Defense
You can see this in the bright colors of the Monarch and the poison dart frog.
Photo courtesy of T. W. Davies, Cal. Acad. of Sciences.
1. Chemical Defense
This is called aposematic coloration, and is widely used among the insects and amphibians.
2. Camouflage
Animals that camouflage themselves pretend to be something they are not. Either their coloration, marking patterns, or entire body resembles something else in their environment, here a leaf, an owl.
2. Camouflage
Here an aptly named walking stick pretends to be a twig, in an attempt to avoid being seen by a bird or other predator. This is an example of
cryptic coloration.
2. Camouflage
In this picture, a foureyed butterfly fish uses deceptive markings. The large spot near the tail resembles an eye. When predators attack the wrong end, the butterfly fish can swim away in the other direction!
2. Camouflage
Some predators also depend on camouflage, but this time it is in order to avoid being seen by their prey. Here, a frogfish resembles a sponge. Small fish swimming nearby will be engulfed in the frogfishs enormous mouth!
3. Mimicry
In mimicry, an organism (the mimic) closely resembles another organism (the model) in order to deceive a third, (the operator). The model and the mimic are not always closely related, but both usually live in the same area. This is similar to camouflage, but in mimicry the model is generally a similar organism rather than a static part of the background environment.
3. Mimicry
There are several types of mimicry. The two most common types are Batesian mimicry and Mullerian mimicry.
John H. Tashjian
3. Mimicry
Batesian mimicry occurs when an edible mimic resembles an unpalatable or poisonous model. In this type of mimicry, only the mimic benefits. An example of Batesian mimicry is the scarlet king snake, a non-poisonous mimic of the extremely venemous coral snake.
3. Mimicry
Another example of Batesian mimicry is the locust borer. This insect not only looks like a bee or wasp, it sounds like one, too!
3. Mimicry
By contrast, Mullerian mimicry occurs when two (or more) distasteful or poisonous organisms resemble each other. Both species benefit because a predator who learns to avoid one species will most likely avoid the other, too.
3. Mimicry
The two invertebrates on the left are different species of sea slugs, while the one on the right is a marine flatworm. All three secrete noxious substances and are unpalatable. Notice their similar aposematic coloring.