Listen

Description

It's easy to believe that a snake might be a deadly mimic. But butterflies that start life as carnivorous caterpillars? Oh heck yeah!








Show Notes:




YouTube BBC: Ants Adopt a Caterpillar




YouTube Entomological Society of America: Ants and Blues




The Pattern of Social Parasitism in Maculinea teleius Butterfly Is Driven by the Size and Spatial Distribution of the Host Ant Nests




Entomology Today: Carnivorous Caterpillars Fool Ants by Sounding like Queens




PLOS One: Variation in Butterfly Larval Acoustics as a Strategy to Infiltrate and Exploit Host Ant Colony Resources




Scientific American: Actual audio of the caterpillar mimicking an ant




Avian deception using an elaborate caudal lure in Pseudocerastes urarachnoides (Serpentes: Viperidae)




Herpetological.org Pseudocerastes urarachnoides: the ambush specialist (great pictures of the viper!)




Discover: Meet the Snake








Transcript:




00:00:03] Speaker A: Welcome to brain junk. I'm Amy Barton.




[00:00:05] Speaker B: And I'm Trace Kerr. And today is everything you never knew you wanted to know about deadly animal mimics.




[00:00:13] Speaker A: I want to know a lot about that.




[00:00:15] Speaker B: Well, I have two. It's double header. I can't make up my mind about subjects lately and I'm just going to mash it together.




[00:00:21] Speaker C: Bonus.




[00:00:24] Speaker B: So the first one, I'm going to give you a little scenario. You have a child pretending to be a queen, infiltrating a city, deceiving soldiers into taking care of her, all the while eating the real queen's children.




[00:00:37] Speaker C: Oh, my word.




[00:00:38] Speaker A: That sounds like a marvel plot.




[00:00:40] Speaker C: It does, right?




[00:00:40] Speaker B: Horror movie, Sci-Fi it's not. It's the real life of the large blue butterfly caterpillar.




[00:00:47] Speaker A: I was sure we were going down an ant road.




[00:00:50] Speaker C: Well, wow.




[00:00:52] Speaker B: Kind of.




So, according to the plus one 2014 paper, this is the title. Variation in butterfly larval acoustics as a strategy to infiltrate and exploit host ant colony resources.




[00:01:10] Speaker C: Ooh, that's quite the title.




[00:01:12] Speaker B: It's so much title. There are about 10,000 different buggy critters out there faking their way into ant hills to snack on ants.




[00:01:19] Speaker C: That's a lot.




[00:01:20] Speaker A: Poor ants. I know there's a lot of them.




[00:01:23] Speaker C: But that's not an excuse. There's so many.




[00:01:27] Speaker B: We could eat a couple.




[00:01:28] Speaker C: It'll be fine.




[00:01:33] Speaker A: Okay, you're right. That's true.




[00:01:34] Speaker D: Yeah.




[00:01:35] Speaker B: Of all of these butterflies in the matulina family, they're super cute. They're little blue butterflies. The one I'm go...



This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit brainjunkpodcast.substack.com