WARNING:
JavaScript is turned OFF. None of the links on this concept map will
work until it is reactivated.
If you need help turning JavaScript On, click here.
This Concept Map, created with IHMC CmapTools, has information related to: 6.1a Solitary Escape Predation, using camouflage ("Crypsis") to avoid being detected For example The whitish moth Catocala relicta perches head-up, with its whitish forewings over its body, on white birch and other light-barked trees, using Warning ("aposematic") coloration to warn predators of toxicity For example the Monarch Butterfly that is brightly colored (orange and black), 6.1a Solitary individuals escape predators by producing "startle sounds that scare potential predators away, Pietrewicz and Kamil used operant conditioning to train captive blue jays to respond to images with cryptically colored moths were shown positioned on an appropriate background to test this The moth selects birch over darker backgrounds, the predator to vomit after consuming the noxious monarch butterfly, therefore they avoid it this causes Monarch Butterfly larvae feed on poisonous milkweed, which they sequester an extremely potent plant poison in their tissues, 6.1a Solitary individuals escape predators by using Warning ("aposematic") coloration to warn predators of toxicity, 6.1a Solitary individuals escape predators by using camouflage ("Crypsis") to avoid being detected, the moth's preference for white birch resting places and its typical perching orientation are antidetection adaptions proves The jays saw the moth 10-20% less often when C. relicta was pinned to pale birch bark than when placed on darker bark and overlooked the moth when it was oriented head-up, the Monarch Butterfly that is brightly colored (orange and black) involves Monarch Butterfly larvae feed on poisonous milkweed, which they sequester an extremely potent plant poison in their tissues, The moth selects birch over darker backgrounds when given a choice The whitish moth Catocala relicta perches head-up, with its whitish forewings over its body, on white birch and other light-barked trees, producing "startle sounds that scare potential predators away for example Cicadas will give a "screech" sound if picked up by a human or predator, The jays saw the moth 10-20% less often when C. relicta was pinned to pale birch bark than when placed on darker bark and overlooked the moth when it was oriented head-up showed that Pietrewicz and Kamil used operant conditioning to train captive blue jays to respond to images with cryptically colored moths were shown positioned on an appropriate background, Cicadas will give a "screech" sound if picked up by a human or predator which can cause the human or predator to drop the cicada, alllowing it to fly away