Friday, 7 March 2014

Summary: Heiling and Herberstein (2004)

Hi fellow science lovers!
My weekly blog is going to be based on all things involving COEVOLUTION; A topic that never ceases to interest me with eye-opening discoveries.
For people who don’t know—coevolution is defined as “…the evolution of two or more interdependent species, each adapting to changes in the other…” – basically meaning that one species evolves and the other follows to ‘even up the playing field’ so to speak.
This week whilst researching I came across this little gem: Thomisus spectabilis (Australian crab spiders) evolved to mimic flower colour signals in order to lure pollinating insects. The really interesting part to this story is the Australian native bee (Austroplebia australis) has coevolved to avoid landing on flowers occupied by the predator! When offered the choice between two white daisies, one occupied by a crab spider; the native bees would land on the vacant flower more often, displaying an anti-predatory response to avoid the flower occupied by the predator (Heiling and Herberstein, 2004)
References:
Definition: http://www.thefreedictionary.com/_/dict.aspx?rd=1&word=coevolution
Journal Article: Heiling, A. & Herberstein, M. 2004. Predator–prey coevolution: Australian native bees avoid their spider predators. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences, 271, S196-S198.
Photo: http://mq.edu.au/newsroom/2013/12/17/australia-a-hot-spot-for-flora-and-fauna-deception/

3 comments:

  1. Nice quick introduction and nice picture. You’ve left me hanging a little with the article – what does this mean for non-native species? Do you think that coevolution has the potential to help reduce the impacts of invasive species (e.g. if native bees get eaten less than invasive bees)? I’m looking forward to finding out more about how, and why, species coevolve.

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  2. Hi Megan,
    I was wondering if the paper mentioned how the bees knew not to land on the flowers with the predators. Is it something such as higher sensitivity to movement (of the spider) or fine-tuning of their flower colour-signal reception? Thanks!
    (p.s sorry, had to repost because I realised I commented in the reply section of Tasmin's post)

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