排序方式: 共有4条查询结果,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1
1.
Balearic lizards use chemical cues from a complex deceptive mimicry to capture attracted pollinators 下载免费PDF全文
Ana Pérez‐Cembranos Valentín Pérez‐Mellado William E. Cooper 《Ethology : formerly Zeitschrift fur Tierpsychologie》2018,124(4):260-268
Deceptive flowers from several plant species emit odors that mimic oviposition cues and attract female insects seeking for a laying site. Helicodiceros muscivorus is a species that emits an odor mimicking the foul smell of rotting meat and thereby attracts blowflies that usually oviposit on carcasses but are deceived into pollinating the plant. Thus, H. muscivorus is a striking case of pollination by brood‐site deception. The Balearic lizard, Podarcis lilfordi, exhibits remarkable interactions with dead horse arum. Balearic lizards, which sometimes forage on carcasses, are attracted to blooming dead horse arum. We showed experimentally that P. lilfordi can detect chemical cues from carcasses on cotton swabs and exhibits elevated tongue‐flick rates to carcass chemical cues compared to control stimuli. Lizards also detected and located hidden carcasses using only airborne chemical cues. The responses of lizards to chemical cues from the spadix of blooming dead horse arum were qualitatively and quantitatively similar to those to carcass odors. Therefore, the decay‐like odor that attracts blowflies for the plant's benefit also attracts lizards. This attraction may initially have been somewhat favorable for lizards that eat blowflies, but slightly unfavorable for plants because the lizards ate some pollinators. We suggest that lizards attracted by odor may have learned later to use the plant for thermoregulation and then consume its fruits, making the association more positive for lizards and benefitted arum by seed dispersal. 相似文献
2.
David Chiszar Kristine DeWelde Milena Garcia Dana Payne Hobart M. Smith 《Zoo biology》1999,18(2):141-146
Six northern Pacific rattlesnakes (Crotalus viridis oreganus) rescued from substandard husbandry conditions were shipped from Woodland Park Zoological Gardens to the University of Colorado in December 1994. The snakes accepted prey and rapidly gained weight, but their searching behavior after predatory strikes was seriously depressed. We administered repeated tests of strike‐induced chemosensory searching (SICS) finding that the snakes improved steadily with each succeeding test, until performance eventually reached the level characteristic of this taxon. Although the snakes reached normal body weight within 4 months of exposure to proper husbandry conditions, normal SICS was not seen until 2 years had elapsed. Release of these snakes into natural habitat prior to recovery of SICS may well have resulted in the demise of the animals, suggesting that rehabilitation efforts must consider recovery of essential behavior patterns that can take far longer than recovery of body weight. Zoo Biol 18:141–146, 1999. © 1999 Wiley‐Liss, Inc. 相似文献
3.
4.
1