Pages that link to "Q28276744"
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The following pages link to The role of eyespots as anti-predator mechanisms, principally demonstrated in the Lepidoptera (Q28276744):
Displaying 50 items.
- Wings, horns, and butterfly eyespots: how do complex traits evolve? (Q21090186) (← links)
- Predator mimicry: metalmark moths mimic their jumping spider predators (Q21092266) (← links)
- Spot the difference: mimicry in a coral reef fish (Q21559697) (← links)
- Contrasting coloration in terrestrial mammals (Q24653848) (← links)
- Predator mimicry, not conspicuousness, explains the efficacy of butterfly eyespots (Q27331400) (← links)
- Attack risk for butterflies changes with eyespot number and size (Q28601516) (← links)
- Eye-spots in Lepidoptera attract attention in humans (Q28608037) (← links)
- Deflective and intimidating eyespots: a comparative study of eyespot size and position in Junonia butterflies (Q28661230) (← links)
- A comparative view of face perception. (Q28744402) (← links)
- The anti-bat strategy of ultrasound absorption: the wings of nocturnal moths (Bombycoidea: Saturniidae) absorb more ultrasound than the wings of diurnal moths (Chalcosiinae: Zygaenoidea: Zygaenidae) (Q30363351) (← links)
- Moth tails divert bat attack: evolution of acoustic deflection (Q30403537) (← links)
- Coincident disruptive coloration (Q30487277) (← links)
- Eyespot display in the peacock butterfly triggers antipredator behaviors in naïve adult fowl (Q30529630) (← links)
- What makes eyespots intimidating-the importance of pairedness (Q30632153) (← links)
- Optic-nerve-transmitted eyeshine, a new type of light emission from fish eyes. (Q30839993) (← links)
- Marginal eyespots on butterfly wings deflect bird attacks under low light intensities with UV wavelengths (Q33592900) (← links)
- Evolutionary history of the recruitment of conserved developmental genes in association to the formation and diversification of a novel trait (Q34159486) (← links)
- Body size affects the evolution of eyespots in caterpillars (Q35627662) (← links)
- A Model for Selection of Eyespots on Butterfly Wings (Q35832207) (← links)
- Combining Taxonomic and Functional Approaches to Unravel the Spatial Distribution of an Amazonian Butterfly Community. (Q35862818) (← links)
- It Depends Who Is Watching You: 3-D Agent Cues Increase Fairness (Q35918237) (← links)
- Butterfly Eyespots: Their Potential Influence on Aesthetic Preferences and Conservation Attitudes (Q36257794) (← links)
- A simulation study of mutations in the genetic regulatory hierarchy for butterfly eyespot focus determination (Q36908084) (← links)
- The role of vocal self-stimulation in female responses to males: implications for state-reading (Q36960670) (← links)
- Conserved developmental processes and the formation of evolutionary novelties: examples from butterfly wings (Q37042453) (← links)
- A Survey of Eyespot Sexual Dimorphism across Nymphalid Butterflies (Q37408054) (← links)
- Is the hibiscus harlequin bug aposematic? The importance of testing multiple predators (Q37586191) (← links)
- Both Palatable and Unpalatable Butterflies Use Bright Colors to Signal Difficulty of Capture to Predators (Q38748625) (← links)
- Developmental plasticity and acclimation both contribute to adaptive responses to alternating seasons of plenty and of stress in Bicyclus butterflies (Q38919564) (← links)
- Predator-induced changes in the growth of eyes and false eyespots (Q39197234) (← links)
- Interspecific visual signalling in animals and plants: a functional classification. (Q39323533) (← links)
- Evidence for the Deflective Function of Eyespots in Wild Junonia evarete Cramer (Lepidoptera, Nymphalidae). (Q39755810) (← links)
- Wingless is a positive regulator of eyespot color patterns in Bicyclus anynana butterflies. (Q41986410) (← links)
- Colour pattern homology and evolution in Vanessa butterflies (Nymphalidae: Nymphalini): eyespot characters (Q41996916) (← links)
- Natural-born con artists and counterfeiters: Who is being deceived here? (Q42552475) (← links)
- Wound healing, calcium signaling, and other novel pathways are associated with the formation of butterfly eyespots (Q42656139) (← links)
- Acoustic defence in an insect: characteristics of defensive stridulation and differences between the sexes in the tettigoniid Poecilimon ornatus (Schmidt 1850). (Q51118015) (← links)
- Spots and stripes: ecology and colour pattern evolution in butterflyfishes. (Q51166969) (← links)
- Eyespots deflect predator attack increasing fitness and promoting the evolution of phenotypic plasticity (Q51394443) (← links)
- Eyespots divert attacks by fish. (Q51522357) (← links)
- Preys' exploitation of predators' fear: when the caterpillar plays the Gruffalo. (Q52839883) (← links)
- A molecular phylogeny ofEumorpha(Lepidoptera: Sphingidae) and the evolution of anti-predator larval eyespots (Q54704334) (← links)
- Predator perception and the interrelation between different forms of protective coloration. (Q55043724) (← links)
- Immunological larval polyphenism in the map butterfly Araschnia levana reveals the photoperiodic modulation of immunity. (Q55359705) (← links)
- The evolution of anti-bat sensory illusions in moths. (Q55459406) (← links)
- The ‘sparkle’ in fake eyes - the protective effect of mimic eyespots in lepidoptera (Q56444101) (← links)
- Squeezing out the last egg-annual fish increase reproductive efforts in response to a predation threat (Q56669872) (← links)
- Two heads are better than one: false head allowsCalycopis cecrops(Lycaenidae) to escape predation by a Jumping Spider,Phidippus pulcherrimus(Salticidae) (Q56689106) (← links)
- Wing pattern diversity in Brassolini butterflies (Nymphalidae, Satyrinae) (Q57706990) (← links)
- The ecology of multiple colour defences (Q57922732) (← links)