On Sat, 11 Feb 2012 13:43:51 -0500, Friar Broccoli <
eli...@gmail.com>
wrote:
>On 2012-02-11 12:33, Richard Norman wrote:
<major snippage>
>> Since this is somewhat out of my own specialized area of interest, I
>> really don't know what the general sentiment is among evolutionary
>> biologists about why, if highly specialized animals like giraffes or
>> zebras or whatever have good evolutionary explanations, then why
>> aren't there more examples of that specialization?
>
>I can suggest the two all too obvious hypothesis:
>(1) If most or all animals did it, the flies would adapt by changing
>their detection strategy removing the utility of the adaptation.
>(2) Trade-off between not being seen by big predators (cats and canines)
>and small ones (flies).
>
>Also, not a lot of horses left in africa, three species of zebra and
>numerous subspecies suggesting the striped formula is working best right
>now.
>
>Do you have any other hypothesis?
>
>On the other hand, I just checked and zebras are slower than horses and
>wildebeests which is the opposite of what I would have expected if my
>hypothesis (2) were correct.
>
First, it is not at all clear that fly business is really the major
evolutionary factor controlling coat color in zebras. That stripes
offer some protection against flies may or may not offset any effect
on predation by hyenas and the big cats, the major predators on
zebras.
Second, my iimpression is that the flies also feed on pretty much any
large mammals they can find. Prime examples would be the bovines,
mainly antelope but also Cape Buffalo and others. There do exist
striped antelope -- the Zebra Duiker, for example -- so why not more
of these?
There are a wide variety of biting flies in Africa besides the
Tabanids but probably all have similar vision. Some flies can pierce
Hippotamus hide. Many of these breed in water and attraction to
horizontally polarized light is a particular feature of aquatic
insects since light reflected from the surface of water tends to be
horizontally polarized.
Contrary to your hypothesis (2): stripes are argued to be protective
against both predatory carnivores and biting flies. At least stripes
in the way that zebras behave in a herd. Solitary zebras might face
different selection pressures.
The real issue is finding evidence to support any definitive
conclusion. It is not difficult to test how well flies are attracted
to different visual patterns including color, intensity, and
polarization. It is difficult to test how well a lion can take down
prey of different visual patterns. It is probably virtually
impossible to test the relative significance of protection against
biting flies vs. protection against carnivorous predators.
As to hypothesis (1): there are known examples of frequency dependent
selection where being in a minority can be advantageous. It is
difficult to see what advantage there is, though, in preventing
members of different species adapting the same strategy. You are
arguing "if I do it, then I may survive but in the long run things may
turn out badly". Evolution doesn't seem to take the long view in that
way.