Differential Survival and Background Selection in Cryptic Trunk-Dwelling Arthropods in Fire-Prone Environments.

IF 2.4 2区 环境科学与生态学 Q2 ECOLOGY
American Naturalist Pub Date : 2024-12-01 Epub Date: 2024-10-17 DOI:10.1086/732864
João Vitor de Alcantara Viana, Rafael Campos Duarte, Carolina Lambertini, Felipe Capoccia, Anna Luiza Oliveira Martins, Camila Vieira, Gustavo Quevedo Romero
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

AbstractFire events change background color, impairing camouflage strategies. However, selection for polymorphic populations may increase camouflage and survival by reducing predation risks. We conducted experiments addressing background selection and predation pressures on the effectiveness of arthropod camouflage against predation in burned and unburned trunks. We tested color and luminance contrasts, as well as trunk preferences, in a color polymorphic grasshopper and praying mantis species with melanic and brown morphs, and a spider species with a single dark color. To expand the scope of our study, we used two distinct visual models of avian predators: ultraviolet sensitive and violet sensitive. We also performed predation experiments using theoretical prey exhibiting black and brown color and human "predators" to understand the effectiveness of color polymorphism against different trunk conditions. Melanic morphs had lower achromatic contrast in burned backgrounds for both visual systems, suggesting that melanism promotes advantages against predation over long distances. However, only spiders actively selected the low-contrasting burned trunks, indicating habitat specialization. The predation experiments showed that black models benefited from camouflage on burned trunks. Conversely, brown models elicited more time and reduced distance in predator searching compared with the black targets on unburned trunks. We suggest that postfire effects can enhance color contrasts and increase predation over color-mismatching individuals, which translates into selection pressures for color polymorphism and matching background choices.

火灾易发环境中隐蔽树干栖息节肢动物的生存差异与背景选择
摘要火灾会改变背景颜色,损害伪装策略。然而,对多态种群的选择可能会通过降低捕食风险来增加伪装和存活率。我们针对节肢动物在被烧毁和未被烧毁的树干上的伪装对捕食效果的背景选择和捕食压力进行了实验。我们测试了色彩和亮度对比,以及树干偏好,对象是具有黑色和棕色形态的色彩多态蚱蜢和螳螂物种,以及具有单一深色的蜘蛛物种。为了扩大研究范围,我们使用了两种不同的鸟类捕食者视觉模型:紫外线敏感型和紫罗兰敏感型。我们还利用表现出黑色和棕色的理论猎物以及人类 "捕食者 "进行了捕食实验,以了解颜色多态性在不同躯干条件下的有效性。在两种视觉系统中,黑色形态在灼烧背景中的消色差都较低,这表明黑色能增强远距离捕食的优势。然而,只有蜘蛛会主动选择对比度较低的烧焦树干,这表明蜘蛛有栖息地特化的倾向。捕食实验表明,黑色模型从在烧焦的树干上伪装中获益。相反,与未被烧毁的树干上的黑色目标相比,棕色模型在捕食者的搜索中花费的时间更长,距离更短。我们认为,火灾后的影响会增强颜色对比,增加对颜色不匹配个体的捕食,从而转化为颜色多态性和匹配背景选择的选择压力。
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来源期刊
American Naturalist
American Naturalist 环境科学-进化生物学
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
3.40%
发文量
194
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Since its inception in 1867, The American Naturalist has maintained its position as one of the world''s premier peer-reviewed publications in ecology, evolution, and behavior research. Its goals are to publish articles that are of broad interest to the readership, pose new and significant problems, introduce novel subjects, develop conceptual unification, and change the way people think. AmNat emphasizes sophisticated methodologies and innovative theoretical syntheses—all in an effort to advance the knowledge of organic evolution and other broad biological principles.
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