Saturday, August 27, 2011

Butterfly species a master of disguise

access Tasty Heliconius numata butterflies (right) mimic the wing patterns of foul-tasting Melinaea butterflies (left) to avoid getting eaten. Genetic tricks using a supergene allow the butterflies to faithfully masquerade as other species. © Mathieu Joron

The tasty Heliconius numata butterfly evades predators by copying the wing patterns of foul-tasting Melinaea butterflies. H. numata, also known as the passion-vine butterfly, has to get the pattern exactly right or a sharp-eyed bird will spot the fake and gobble it up.

Born mimics, members of the species lock in wing patterns with flipped-around bits of DNA, Richard ffrench-Constant of the University of Exeter in England and colleagues report online August 14 in Nature.

The flipped DNA causes six or more genes — on a section of a chromosome important in setting wing patterns in butterflies and peppered moths — to be inherited as a single unit, a supergene. Different versions of the super­gene allow H. numata to adopt seven different wing patterns reminiscent of several bad-tasting species.

Other Heliconius butterflies mimic only one nonpalatable species. Researchers aren’t sure if other butterfly species use DNA flipping to determine their patterns. 


Found in: Genes & Cells and Life

View the original article here

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