Reduced palatability, fast flight, and tails: decoding the defence arsenal of Eudaminae skipper butterflies in a Neotropical locality.

IF 2.1 3区 生物学 Q3 ECOLOGY
Daniel Linke, Jacqueline Hernandez Mejia, Valery N P Eche Navarro, Letty Salinas Sánchez, Pedro de Gusmão Ribeiro, Marianne Elias, Pável Matos-Maraví
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Abstract

Prey often rely on multiple defences against predators, such as flight speed, attack deflection from vital body parts, or unpleasant taste, but our understanding on how often and why they are co-exhibited remains limited. Eudaminae skipper butterflies use fast flight and mechanical defences (hindwing tails), but whether they use other defences like unpalatability (consumption deterrence) and how these defences interact have not been assessed. We tested the palatability of 12 abundant Eudaminae species in Peru, using training and feeding experiments with domestic chicks. Further, we approximated the difficulty of capture based on flight speed and quantified it by wing loading. We performed phylogenetic regressions to find any association between multiple defences, body size, and habitat preference. We found a broad range of palatability in Eudaminae, within and among species. Contrary to current understanding, palatability was negatively correlated with wing loading, suggesting that faster butterflies tend to have lower palatability. The relative length of hindwing tails did not explain the level of butterfly palatability, showing that attack deflection and consumption deterrence are not mutually exclusive. Habitat preference (open or forested environments) did not explain the level of palatability either, although butterflies with high wing loading tended to occupy semi-closed or closed habitats. Finally, the level of unpalatability in Eudaminae is size dependent. Larger butterflies are less palatable, perhaps because of higher detectability/preference by predators. Altogether, our findings shed light on the contexts favouring the prevalence of single versus multiple defensive strategies in prey.

降低适口性、快速飞行和尾巴:解码新热带地区 Eudaminae 跳蝶的防御武器库。
猎物通常依靠多种防御手段来抵御捕食者,例如飞行速度、身体要害部位的攻击偏转或难闻的味道,但我们对这些防御手段共同出现的频率和原因的了解仍然有限。蝶形目(Eudaminae)翘嘴蝶使用快速飞行和机械防御(后翅尾),但它们是否使用其他防御手段,如不可口性(消费威慑),以及这些防御手段如何相互作用,还没有进行过评估。我们用家养雏鸟进行了训练和喂食实验,测试了秘鲁 12 种丰富的 Eudaminae 种类的适口性。此外,我们用飞行速度近似地解释了捕获难度,并用翅膀负荷量化了捕获难度。我们进行了系统发育回归,以寻找多重防御、体型和栖息地偏好之间的关联。我们发现,Eudaminae在物种内部和物种之间的适口性范围很广。与目前的认识相反,适口性与翅膀负荷呈负相关,这表明速度较快的蝴蝶往往适口性较低。后翅尾部的相对长度并不能解释蝴蝶适口性的高低,这表明攻击偏转和消费威慑并不相互排斥。栖息地偏好(开阔或森林环境)也不能解释适口性水平,尽管高翅负荷的蝴蝶倾向于占据半封闭或封闭的栖息地。最后,Eudaminae 的不适口性与体型大小有关。体型较大的蝴蝶适口性较低,这可能是因为捕食者的可探测性/偏好性较高。总之,我们的发现揭示了猎物普遍采用单一防御策略与多重防御策略的背景。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Evolutionary Biology
Journal of Evolutionary Biology 生物-进化生物学
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
4.80%
发文量
152
审稿时长
3-6 weeks
期刊介绍: It covers both micro- and macro-evolution of all types of organisms. The aim of the Journal is to integrate perspectives across molecular and microbial evolution, behaviour, genetics, ecology, life histories, development, palaeontology, systematics and morphology.
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