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Female butterflies prefer males with flashier wings
6/12/2012 3:08:00 PM

Washington, June 12 (ANI): With only limited exposure, female butterflies can learn to prefer males with more spots on their wings, a new Yale University study has found.

The study gives a partial explanation of an evolutionary mystery.

Biologists used to think that preference for certain traits such as wing spots are hardwired into insects. But that left scientists wondering how butterflies managed to evolve such great diversity in their wing coloration.

The Yale team studied the butterfly species Bicyclus anynana, which in the wild has two spots on its wings. The researchers found that female butterflies of the species learn to prefer males with four spots on their wings over those with two spots.

What surprised us was that females learn this preference after being in the presence of males for just a very short period of time, said Erica L. Westerman of Yale's Department of Evolutionary Biology and Ecology (EEB) and lead author

The male did not have to court them or engage in flashy behavior, she stated.

While other studies have found that invertebrates can learn new preferences, the Yale researchers were surprised to find that an insect species like the butterfly actually could learn to favor some wing patterns more than others.

When exposed to butterflies with four brilliant ultraviolet-reflecting spots for only three hours, females no longer show preference for the type of males found in the wild. But females initially exposed to drabber males with one or zero spots did not change their original preferences.

There is a bias in what females learn, and they learn extra ornamentation is better, said Antonia Monteiro, EEB professor and senior author of the paper.

The findings that social environment can change mating preference of female butterflies helps explain how novel wing patterns evolve, said the researchers.

Now, Westerman wants to discover how female butterflies learn to make these choices.

What we have found is a previously unexplored mechanism for biasing the evolution of morphological diversity. We are now investigating what other cues are being evaluated during the learning period and what prevents females from mating with members of other species, Westerman said.

The study was published online the week of June 11 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. (ANI)

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