4.2 Article

Comparative and experimental studies on the relationship between body size and countershading in caterpillars

Journal

JOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
Volume 36, Issue 7, Pages 1032-1039

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jeb.14153

Keywords

background matching; camouflage; crypsis; lepidoptera; obliterative shading; self-shadow concealment

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Countershading is a common camouflage strategy in the animal kingdom, where the dorsal surfaces are darker than the ventral surface to decrease detection by predators. This study investigated the association between body size and countershading in caterpillars and found weak evidence supporting a relationship. The results suggest that body size may not be a universal factor shaping the variation in countershading observed in caterpillars.
Countershading is a gradient of colouration in which the illuminated dorsal surfaces are darker than the unilluminated ventral surface. It is widespread in the animal kingdom and endows the body with a more uniform colour to decrease the chance of detection by predators. Although recent empirical studies support the theory of survival advantage conferred by countershading, this camouflage strategy has evolved only in some of the cryptic animals, and our understanding of the factors that affect the evolution of countershading is limited. This study examined the association between body size and countershading using lepidopteran larvae (caterpillars) as a model system. Specifically, we predicted that countershading may have selectively evolved in large-sized species among cryptic caterpillars if (1) large size constrains camouflage which facilitates the evolution of a trait reinforcing their crypsis and (2) the survival advantage of countershading is size-dependent. Phylogenetic analyses of four different lepidopteran families (Saturniidae, Sphingidae, Erebidae, and Geometridae) suggest equivocal results: countershading was more likely to be found in larger species in Saturniidae but not in the other families. The field predation experiment assuming avian predators did not support size-dependent predation in countershaded prey. Collectively, we found only weak evidence that body size is associated with countershading in caterpillars. Our results suggest that body size is not a universal factor that has shaped the interspecific variation in countershading observed in caterpillars.

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