banner1

Home arrow Everything Biology arrow To be or not to be a mimic
Main Menu
Home
News
Links
Wiki
Search
Administrator
FAQ
Contact Us
Science Books
Register
Online Store
Science on the Web
Store - beta
Project Fork
Feature Sections
Encyclopedia Astronuc
ID Watch
Community Menu
Forum
Chat Room
Einstein@Home
Member Blogs
CB
CB User List
Login Form
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?
November 21, 2008, 04:16:26 AM
Username: Password:
Login with username, password and session length

Password reminder
Newsflash
Statistics
Members: 2734
News: 229
Web Links: 34

Notice: Undefined index: ID_MEMBER in /home1/smforgeo/public_html/everythingscience/mambots/content/smf.discussbot.php on line 341
To be or not to be a mimic PDF Print E-mail
User Rating: / 3
PoorBest 
Written by Everything Science   
Jan 21, 2005 at 06:58 PM
What is the world coming to? An unsuspecting reef fish steps up to have its parasites removed by its favourite cleaner fish, the bluestreak cleaner wrasse, but instead of a thorough going over, it gets a nasty nip from the cleverly disguised bluestriped fangblenny, intent on a quick feed.

Blue striped fangblenny hides in coral
Mimics in nature have usually evolved to resemble foul-tasting animals, in a bid to protect themselves from predators, but the bluestriped fangblenny fish mimics a model -the bluestreak cleaner wrasse- that is not only harmless but actually beneficial to many reef fish species.

Researchers at University of East Anglia, Isabelle Côté and Karen Cheney, have discovered that fangblennies can choose when to be mimics. When no cleanerfish are nearby, fangblennies can turn off their remarkable black-and-blue cleaner-like colours. They become brown, green or orange, add a second side stripe to their bodies, and melt into large shoals from which they attack unsuspecting fish swimming by.

Opportunistic mimicry allows fangblennies to live on all reefs, even those where there are no cleanerfish. It seems that natural selection can result not only in extraordinary resemblances between unrelated animals, but also in an astonishing flexibility in when to show off these similarities.

'It was already known that these fish could be found in
various colour forms. But it was very exciting to find that individuals can change colour. Mimicry is fairly common in this family so I'm keen to see whether the same phenomenon is found in related species.' said Isabelle Côté.

Re: To be or not to be a mimic
Sarah90    January 29th, 2005 - 4:48 AM
Looks Beautiful !   ...uh ohh...
... Oh No !!!...not the...flanganglefangbenny !!!! :computer.gif:

(2) Comments posted about this in the forum

<Previous   Next>
Events Calendar
November 2008
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
 « Oct   Dec » 
Your Complete Science Portal
iconicon
Most Read

Valid XHTML 1.0!


Mambo is Free Software released under the GNU/GPL License.