Frequency-dependent selection on aposematic prey: some experiments |
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Authors: | JEREMY J. D. GREENWOOD PETER A. COTTON DUNCAN M. WILSON |
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Affiliation: | Department of Biological Sciences, Dundee University, Scotland DD14HN |
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Abstract: | Experiments to measure the strength of frequency-dependent selection on dimorphic populations of distasteful, brightly coloured prey were carried out, using pastry cylinders as prey and wild birds as predators. When the two forms were haphazardly intermingled, the birds took a relative excess of whichever form happened to be the rarer if all prey in the population were distasteful but selected the forms independently of frequency if they were all neutral in flavour. They did not take an excess of the rarer form from populations of distasteful prey when that form was distributed in a single clump rather than evenly dispersed among the commoner form. This confirms the expectation that rarer forms of aposematic animals are at a frequency-dependent disadvantage when they are intermingled with commoner forms but not when they occur in clusters. |
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Keywords: | Frequency dependent selection apostatic aposematism |
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