Published July 31, 2013 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data from: Pollinator deception in the orchid mantis

Description

Mimicry has evolved in contexts such as camouflage, predator deterrence, luring of prey and pollinator attraction. Mimicry of flowers has until now only been demonstrated in angiosperms, yet it has been hypothesized that the Malaysian orchid mantis Hymenopus coronatus mimics a flower to attract pollinators as prey. Despite the popularity of this charismatic insect, this long discussed hypothesis has never been experimentally investigated. We found that, as predicted for mimicry, the color of H. coronatus is indistinguishable from the color of sympatric flowers for hymenopteran pollinators. Field experiments show that isolated mantises attract wild pollinators at a rate even higher than flowers and capture these pollinators as prey items. After over a century of conjecture, we provide the first experimental evidence of pollinator deception in the orchid mantis and the first description of a unique predatory strategy that has not been documented in any other animal species.

Notes

Files

Mantis Flower Reflectance.txt

Files (447.9 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:77ca0cf2bcf7872c977f9743cbfdea91
447.3 kB Preview Download
md5:c8042640313880bac5a56404d0a9e863
542 Bytes Preview Download

Additional details

Related works

Is cited by
10.1086/673858 (DOI)