Lack of neophobic responses to color in a jumping spider that uses color cues when foraging (Habronattus pyrrithrix)
收藏DataONE2021-07-13 更新2025-04-26 收录
下载链接:
https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:3f8b22f61fd8a2ac71fe1639bc84dedaa654d4f8bb6c8000084d11bacc873632
下载链接
链接失效反馈官方服务:
资源简介:
Chemically defended prey often advertise their toxins with bright and conspicuous colors. To understand why such colors are effective at reducing predation, we need to understand the psychology of key predators. In bird predators, there is evidence that individuals avoid novelty - including prey of novel colors (with which they have had no prior experience). Moreover, the effect of novelty is strongest for colors that are typically associated with aposematic prey (e.g., red, orange, yellow). Given these findings in the bird literature, color neophobia has been argued to be a driving force in the evolution of aposematism. However, no studies have yet asked whether invertebrate predators respond similarly to novel colors. Here, we tested whether naive lab-raised jumping spiders (Habronattus pyrrithrix) exhibit similar patterns of color neophobia to birds. Using color-manipulated living prey, we first color-exposed spiders to prey of two out of three colors (blue, green, or red), with the ...
创建时间:
2025-04-24



