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February 23, 2015

Hidden in plain sight: Amazonian bird chick mimics toxic caterpillar to avoid being eaten

The top image shows a cinereous mourner nestling (Laniocera hypopyrra). The bottom shows a large, hairy caterpillar from the area (Megalopyge or Podalia sp.) that matches the nestling's plumage characteristics. Credit: Top, Santiago David Rivera; bottom, Wendy Valencia
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The top image shows a cinereous mourner nestling (Laniocera hypopyrra). The bottom shows a large, hairy caterpillar from the area (Megalopyge or Podalia sp.) that matches the nestling's plumage characteristics. Credit: Top, Santiago David Rivera; bottom, Wendy Valencia

In a study published in the January 2015 issue of The American Naturalist, Gustavo A. Londoño, Duván Garcia, and Manuel Sánchez Martínez report a novel nesting strategy observed in a tropical lowland bird that inhabits an area with very high losses to nest predators.

How can tropical birds cope with the high rates of that are typical in most tropical habitats? Are there nesting strategies that allow to escape predators such as birds, mammals, and snakes that regularly eat eggs and nestlings?

During the fall of 2012, while working on a long-term avian ecological study, the researchers discovered the second nest ever described for the cinereous mourner (Laniocera hypopyrra) at Pantiacolla Lodge in the upper Madre de Dios River in southeastern Peru. They observed that upon hatching, the chicks had downy feathers with long orange barbs with white tips, which was very different from any other they had observed in the area. The peculiar downy feathers attracted their attention, but the nestling behavior provided a more important cue. While researchers were collecting morphological measurements, the nestling started moving its head very slowly from side to side in a way typical of many hairy caterpillars. While working in the area, the investigators found a poisonous caterpillar with similar size and hair coloration as the nestling. Therefore, the researchers suggest that this is an example of Batesian mimicry in which the nestling tricks predators into thinking that it is a toxic, spiny caterpillar rather than a highly edible nestling.

This remarkable adaptation may well have evolved to decrease nest predation probability, increasing nesting success in this species. Examples of Batesian mimicry are very rare in vertebrates.

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Journal information: American Naturalist

Provided by University of Chicago

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