Abstract

Warning signals protect unpalatable prey from predation because predators who learn the association between the warning signal and prey unprofitability decrease attacks on the prey. Most of the research have focused on visual aposematic signals that are constantly presented and visible to the predators. But a variety of chemically defended insects are rather cryptic when resting, and only in response to predator attacks (post-attack) they perform displays of conspicuous abdomens or hindwings normally hidden under forewings. The function of those displays in unpalatable insects is not well understood. We examined two adaptive hypotheses on this facultative aposematic display using wild-caught oriental tits (Parus minor) as predators. First, we tested whether the display increases the rejection of the prey by predators upon seeing the display (i.e. at the moment of attack) through learning trials (aposematic signaling hypothesis). Second, we tested whether the display facilitates the memory formation between cryptic visible form of the prey and prey defense so that it prevents the predators initiate an attack upon seeing the cryptic form (facilitation hypothesis). We found that predators learned to avoid attacking the prey which supports the facilitation hypothesis. However, the support for the aposematic signaling hypothesis was equivocal. Our results open new directions of research by highlighting the possibility that similar facilitation effects may contribute to the evolution of various forms of post-attack visual displays in chemically, or otherwise, defended animals.

Highlights

  • Aposematism comprises a situation when defended prey advertise their unpalatability to the predators by using conspicuous warning signals

  • As an outcome of decades of research on visual aposematic signals we currently understand relatively well the mechanisms involved in the avoidance learning processes

  • Our results suggest that, when detection rates were the same among prey, the speed of avoidance learning was similar between facultatively conspicuous prey and conspicuous prey. This demonstrates that, in terms of facilitating avoidance learning in predators, the facultatively displayed aposematic signal in a prey can be as effective as the typical static aposematic signal

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Summary

Introduction

Aposematism comprises a situation when defended prey advertise their unpalatability to the predators by using conspicuous warning signals. Some predators can attack and consume defended prey regardless of the prey defenses either because they are resistant to prey defense (Brodie and Brodie, 1999; Exnerová et al, 2003), they are either naïve or adventurous (Marples et al, 1998; Exnerová et al, 2010), or in circumstances when predators are in good body conditions and can endure the toxic chemicals of the prey (Skelhorn and Rowe, 2007; Barnett et al, 2012). Defended prey can gain many advantages from being conspicuous, they rarely maximize their conspicuousness (Endler and Mappes, 2004)

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