Poison birds copy `don't touch' feathers.A bird with toxic feathers may have taken on the colors of a poisonous neighbor, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. a new genetic analysis. Plenty of butterflies have evolved copycat warning colors, but cases of bird mimicry mimicry, in biology, the advantageous resemblance of one species to another, often unrelated, species or to a feature of its own environment. (When the latter results from pigmentation it is classed as protective coloration. have been hard to demonstrate, explains John P. Dumbacher of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. Field experiments testing for insect mimicry don't translate to birds. Scientists can't net birds by the hundreds and whisk them off to different habitats. So, Dumbacher and Robert Fleischer, also of the Smithsonian, turned to genetic analysis. Because political turmoil in New Guinea kept them out of parts of the birds' habitats, Dumbacher and Fleischer coaxed DNA DNA: see nucleic acid. DNA or deoxyribonucleic acid One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes. from old museum specimens. The pair worked out a family tree for two species of small poisonous birds, the hooded and the variable pitohui. The new family tree suggests that one subspecies subspecies, also called race, a genetically distinct geographical subunit of a species. See also classification. of variable pitohui mimics its toxic neighbor, a hooded pitohui, the researchers report in the Oct. 7 PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY Proceedings of the Royal Society is a scientific journal published by the Royal Society of London. Today, the Royal Society publishes two proceeding series:
Dumbacher was the first Westerner west·ern·er also West·ern·er n. A native or inhabitant of the west, especially the western United States. Westerner Noun a person from the west of a country or region Noun 1. to realize that pitohuis are poisonous: He licked his finger after one nipped him during handling in 1989. "Within a minute, your tongue tingles, then it burns, and your mouth can go numb for several hours," he says. The same toxins turn up in certain poison-dart frogs in the New World and another New Guinea bird (SN: 10/21/00, p. 263). Six pitohui species, five poisonous to some degree, occupy the island of New Guinea. Throughout its range, the hooded pitohui, Pitohui dichrous, flashes a brickred back and breast contrasting with a dark head. However, the variable pitohui, Pitohui kirhocephalus, took its common name from the color variations of its 20 subspecies. Some of these flash the same bold pattern as the hooded pitohui. Dumbacher recalls that as soon as he recognized the pitohui's toxicity, he wondered whether some of the lineages had come to look the same when they lived in the same area. Such mimicry, called Mullerian, theoretically works to the advantage of both partners. The greater the abundance of noxious creatures bearing the same colors, the more chances predators have to learn to stay away. The genetic tree that Dumbacher and Fleischer constructed shows one variable pitohui subspecies, called dohertyi, perched in the midst Adv. 1. in the midst - the middle or central part or point; "in the midst of the forest"; "could he walk out in the midst of his piece?" midmost of close relatives with very different coloring. The peninsula where dohertyi lives is frequented by hooded pitohuis, which it resembles. The color sharing seems not to be a quirk of having common ancestors, the researchers contend, but could be mimicry. Andrew V.Z. Brower of Oregon State University Oregon State University, at Corvallis; land-grant and state supported; coeducational; chartered 1858 as Corvallis College, opened 1865. In 1868 it was designated Oregon's land-grant agricultural college and was taken over completely by the state in 1885. in Corvallis, who's studying Mullerian mimicry in butterflies, cautions that the pattern of ancestral coloring in the new family tree "is not superstrong evidence" for mimicry. The tree itself is valuable, says Thane thane n. 1. a. A freeman granted land by the king in return for military service in Anglo-Saxon England. b. A man ranking above an ordinary freeman and below a nobleman in Anglo-Saxon England. 2. K. Pratt of the U.S. Geological Survey in Volcano, Hawaii, and coauthor of Birds of New Guinea (1986, Princeton University Press). He sees in the new work evidence for splitting the variable pitohui into three species. "It had been held up as an example of an amazingly variable species. That was the trouble. It was too amazingly variable," he says. |
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