Theoretical Investigations of Automimicry: Multiple Trial Learning and the Palatability Spectrum
- 1 August 1973
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 70 (8) , 2261-2265
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.70.8.2261
Abstract
We previously explored automimicry assuming that a species of prey was so unpalatable as to promote conditioned avoidance for a period of time after a predator encountered a single individual (Case 1). In this paper, we assume that the prey is less noxious and that two encounters are required. Case 2 allows the two encounters with unpalatables to be separated by any number of palatables, while in Case 3 the predator must encounter two unpalatables, consecutively.The general relationships in the three cases are similar, but the automimetic advantage is reduced moderately in Case 2 and greatly in Case 3. To attain the same automimetic advantage as in Case 1 requires an increase in the proportion of unpalatables, or in the induced rejection period, or both. Consequently, selection will tend to increase the unpalatability so that Cases 2 and 3 converge to Case 1.Species that are uniformly and highly unpalatable can afford to be more dispersed than automimetic species. Case-2 and -3 automimetic species will benefit greatly from gregariousness, while in Case-1 automimicry situations this is less important.Keywords
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