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Under
Embargo Till: 00:01 UTC February 20, 2008
Posted:
00:01 UTC 02/19/2008
Masters
of disguise: secrets of nature's 'great pretenders' revealed
Wednesday, February 20, 2008
A
gene which helps a harmless African butterfly ward off predators
by giving it wing patterns like those of toxic species, has been
identified by scientists who publish their findings today (20
February 2008).
The mocker swallowtail
butterfly, Papilio dardanus, is unusual because it emerges from
its chrysalis with one of a large number of different possible
wing patterns and colors. This is different from most butterfly
species which are identified by a common wing pattern and color.
Furthermore, some of the different patterns that the mocker
swallowtail exhibits mimic those of poisonous species, which
affords this harmless insect a valuable disguise which scares off
predators.
Biologists are interested in
finding out exactly how wing pattern is determined in the mocker
swallowtail, because they believe that understanding how these
different mimic patterns evolved may shed new light on whether
such evolutionary changes occur in small gradual steps, or sudden
leaps.
In the 1950s scientists
realized there must be a genetic 'switch' controlling which of
the numerous possible wing patterns is expressed in each
individual mocker swallowtail, but until now the location and
identity of the genes involved have remained a mystery.
The new study, published in
Proceedings of the Royal Society B, shows how a team of
biologists used molecular tags and DNA sequencing in order to
pinpoint the part of its genetic code that determines wing
pattern and color. Their study suggests that a developmental gene
called 'invected', which was already known to be involved in the
early embryonic development of butterflies, is behind the
allocation of different wing patterns in mocker swallowtails.
Professor Alfried Vogler of
Imperial College London's Department of Life Sciences and the
Natural History Museum, one of the authors on the paper,
explains, however, that further investigation is needed to figure
out exactly how this gene works.
"We've taken a big step
here towards identifying exactly how this fascinating insect
species is endowed with such a wide variety of extremely useful
wing patterns. However, identifying the area of the genome
involved in this process is just the first step - we now need to
look in more detail at the differences in the invected gene, and
another gene located next to it, to find out exactly how they
produce the different forms," he said.
He goes on to emphasis the
significance of studying the mocker swallowtail, saying: "You
could argue that there would be little point in a species which
slowly evolved to mimic a poisonous butterfly over the course of
generations - the disguise is only useful if full and complete.
This could suggest the possibility of sudden leaps in evolution
occurring in this species, which would be an incredibly exciting
discovery - by studying the changes in gene sequences we will
find out if this happened or not."
The mocker swallowtail is found
in sub-Saharan Africa and has a wingspan of between
three-and-a-half, and four-and-a-quarter inches. Only females of
the species exhibit the wing patterns that mimic other
butterflies. All the males are yellow, with black markings and
have the typical tails of most swallowtail butterflies.
The study was funded by the
Human Frontier Science Program, NERC and BBSRC.
Source:
Imperial College London

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