Skip to main content

Posts

Showing posts from August, 2018

Mullerian Mimicry

       Hello everyone!        I'm back! (mild applause...) So I missed so much because, I went on a missions trip to Northern Ireland, I went to help my grandpa build a shed, I went on a vacay with my family for our summer vacation. And that took a while. I also had some school over the summer... (someone in the audience yells, "Stop making excuses!") But anyway, I'm back and I hope to stay that way.        Today I am bringing you the topic of Mimetic rings, or Mullerian Mimicry. This is when a very distasteful butterfly of one genus has a counterpart in another genus that has almost the same coloring and wing shape. This was discovered by a German naturalist named Fritz Muller, hence Mullerian mimicry. He first brought the idea up in 1878 and did a few experiments to prove his theory.       His idea was first found in insects from Lepidoptera, but later found in other insects such as bees, and later in fro...