Friday, April 25, 2014

Batesian Mimicry Article


As we have seen in our Lab portion of Herpetology, bright coloration of an organism is often associated with either toxicity of the skin, which is seen as aposematic coloration in poison dart frogs, or as a warning mechanism to predators that they are venomous, which is seen in species like Micrurus Fulvius, the coral snake. There is a phenomenon seen in certain species of organisms in which the warning through coloration mechanism associated with poisonous or venomous organisms is copied and used with the same intent of protection but lacking the presence of the danger it warns of. This copying of the coloration is called Batesian mimicry and this is the primary topic of the article entitled, A Batesian mimic and its model share color production mechanisms, written by David W. Kikuchi, David W. Pfennig. This article was published in August of 2012 in Current Zoology, Volume 58. Issue 4. Essentially, those that use Batesian mimicry are harmless species of prey and what protects them is the fact that they resemble its dangerous counterpart, ultimately protecting it. Mimicry can be understood as convergent evolution within two different species. The ambiguity, in which this article seeks to clarify, is the actual physiological mechanism from which this coloration created. If an ancestor has a similar mechanism associated with the making of the coloration, then this allows for the phenomenon of convergent evolution that almost seems to have occurred with intent to be explained more objectively. Because evolution does not occur with a specific intent and is merely genetically acquired advantageous traits, a ancestral mechanism consistent with the species allows for this definition to remain in tact. An example of Batesian mimicry can be seen between a local species of snake in the family Elapidae, Micrurus fulvius (the coral snake), and in a species of snake in the family Colubridae, Lampropeltis elapsoides (the scarlet king snake). The poisonous snake is Micrurus fulvius and it has a black nose and is banded with red to yellow to black and repeats this pattern. The mimic of this snake is the Lampropeltis elapsoides and this snake has a red nose and is red then black and then yellow and the pattern repeats. The phrase that helps keep the patterns straight to determine the poisonous from the harmless snake is: “Red on Black a friend to Jack, red on yellow will kill a fellow.” I struggled with the concept of Batesian mimicry prior to reading this article do to the very concept this article sought to disentangle, namely, how mimicry evolutionarily came to be since traits are not created simply because they are advantageous and the organism wants and could benefit from it. This article shows that the mechanism behind the coloration of both of these snakes is the same for the two. This leads to the conclusion that this mechanism was genetically passed down to these two different species by common ancestor and therefore is not exactly convergent evolution but rather the same evolution passed on by their common ancestor. The investigators investigated the mechanism by using an Transmission Electron Microscope or TEM to view the skin cells of the snakes and determine composition and other factors associated with pigmentation within the upper-epithelial layers. The histology techniques were extensive and absorbance spectroscopy was used to determine if the tissue samples were similar both species. The consistencies between the snakes were enough to discern the mechanism to be primarily equivalent. This is the website for the article:






2 comments:

Allison Welch said...

Interesting. There are some other examples where the underlying mechanism is conserved, which apparently made a convergent trait easier to evolve.

Anonymous said...

I almost used this article for my literature synthesis presentation!

I thought it was such a cool topic to study, mainly because coral snake mimicry seems like such a basic concept, but there are so many other factors that play into the mimicry such as the way that the pigments are being perceived by predators, the ratio of the black/red colors, etc.