Saturday, June 13, 2015

Harmless Caterpillar Mimics Menacing Snake Head to Fool Predators

A gracious good day to you! Thanks for clicking by. I appreciate it. Coffee's always on and the virtual treats just get better and better so help yourself! Say...do you like snakes? How about caterpillars? Well meet the Dynastor...

The Dynastor darius darius is a harmless caterpillar with astounding survival skills. In order to avoid being attacked by predators during its pupal stage (when the larvae transform into butterflies or moths), the helpless creature takes on the form of a rather menacing snake!

Native to Trinidad, the shape-shifting D. darius often mimics the head of a Gaboon pit viper, successfully fooling even the toughest of its predators. After it sheds its final layer of skin, the caterpillar enters its pupal stage, and its chrysalis takes the shape of a viper’s head. The transformation lasts 13 days, during which time this mimicry is its only line of defence. To make the appearance even more believable, the scary-looking chrysalis hangs on the underside of forest leaves at a carefully selected angle.

Apart from its realistic impression of an alert viper, this creature has another trick up its sleeve – it is able to sense the world outside and react appropriately from inside its cover. So when a predator approaches, the pupa can sense movement and swing its shell back and forth, creating the illusion of a moving snake that’s ready to attack.


“The explanation may be that the predator itself turns and flees after suddenly coming face-to-face with a realistic ‘snake’ that waves violently back and forth, as does the pupa of Dynastor Darius when disturbed, ” Annette Aiello and Robert Silberglied wrote in Life History of Dynastor Darius in Panama.

According to Earth Touch News, “These elaborate defences are not really all that surprising when you consider that caterpillars are pretty much just juicy protein sausages whose main life function is to become even bigger, juicier protein sausages. 

These voracious feeders are preyed upon by everything from birds to people and require powerful defences if they are to have any hope of surviving.”

Well, it may not be surprising, but I’d still say it’s pretty darn cool! You have to wonder how they do that, don't you?

See ya, eh!

Bob

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