Seasonal Alternation of Putative Camouflage Wing Morphs of the American Snout Butterfly (Libytheana carinenta).

Autor: Papaj, Daniel R.1 (AUTHOR) papaj@arizona.edu, Baek, Minjung1 (AUTHOR), Fung, Chloe1 (AUTHOR), Richards, Brooklyn A.1,2 (AUTHOR)
Předmět:
Zdroj: American Naturalist. Sep2024, Vol. 204 Issue 3, p304-313. 10p.
Abstrakt: Intraspecific variation in camouflage is common in animals. Sexual dimorphism in camouflage is less common and, where observed, attributed to trade-offs between natural selection for predator avoidance and sexual selection for conspicuous mating signals. Here we report on variation in putatively cryptic ventral hindwing patterns in the American snout butterfly, Libytheana carinenta. We use field surveys and crowdsourced data to characterize three morphs. One is found in both sexes, one is male specific, and one is female specific. The sex-specific morphs constitute a sexually dimorphic set whose frequencies change together in time. Field surveys indicate that butterflies in southern Arizona transition from midsummer dominance of the sexually monomorphic pattern to early-fall dominance of the sexually dimorphic set. Crowdsourced data indicate that the sexually dimorphic set dominates in early spring, transitioning later into a mixture of morphs dominated by the monomorphic pattern, with the dimorphic set rising in frequency again in late fall. We discuss this unique pattern of camouflage variation with respect to contemporary theory on animal coloration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: GreenFILE