Animals that fool you

For wild animals, April Fool’s isn’t a one day event. While the act of pranking in the human world may be seen as all in good fun, some animal species “prank” each other as a way of survival and they do so in several different ways. Pranking in the animal world is done most often with camouflage, which can be characterized as two main forms, crypsis or mimicry. We’re highlighting some animals that regularly fool us (and one another).

Let us present to you just a few of the ultimate pranksters of the animal kingdom and a few of the ways they fool us.

an owl sitting in a cavity of a tree with coloration similar to the tree bark
Screech owl at Santa Ana National Wildlife Refuge | Image Details

Fooling Us With Camouflage

There are so many species that survive by working to go unnoticed. They mask their bodies, their noises, and even their smell. The animals that use these tactics are applying what biologists call “crypsis,” and it’s the animals that use crypsis that can hide in plain sight. We feel so fooled!

two photos: left, a rabbit hides in a thicket of dead grass and right, a lizard with horn like projections on skin blends in with background
Look closely! This riparian riparian
Definition of riparian habitat or riparian areas.

Learn more about riparian
brush rabbit was hiding in plain sight on the San Joaquin River National Wildlife Refuge. || Right: Coastal horned lizard | Image Details

Something’s definitely fishy!

Fish are masters at blending in with their surroundings. They will fool us with their coloring from above and below with their impressive crypsis.

In freshwater, juvenile trout have “parr” marks along their sides which help them camouflage. Adults have spots.

two photos: left, a juvenile trout with coloration similar to the river bottom and right, an adult trout with coloration similar to the dark river bottom
Left: Juvenile rainbow trout || Right: Adult rainbow trout | Image Details

Now for a harder one...

a deer hiding in tall grasses is hardly visible
| Image Details

Can you spot the deer hiding? 

a grey murrelet chick blends in with the surrounding rocks of various sizes and colors
| Image Details

The Kittlitz’s murrelet is one of the rarest and least known seabirds in the world with some fascinating nesting stories. Can you spot the baby? 

an orange butterfly with black edges and white spots rests on a person's thumb
Viceroy butterfly | Image Details

Fooling Us With Mimicry

When animals aren’t fooling us with crypsis, they’re being sneaky mimicking one another! Below are just a few examples of how wildlife mimic to deceive and survive.

Batesian vs. Müllerian mimicry

Is that a monarch? Look again! The viceroy butterfly is a butterfly species that employs Müllerian mimicry. This is when two toxic species co-evolve to look similar and share protection. Their similarities essentially scream, “Hey I’m poisonous!” to predators. The easiest way to tell these two apart is to look for the horizontal band on the bottom of the viceroy’s wings.

While monarchs feed on milkweed to gain some toxins in their bodies to ward off predators, adult viceroys get noxious salicylic acid from trees in the willow family.

A fresh colored monarch butterfly feeds on the nectar of a milkweed flower, drinking in the energy it needs for its migration journey.
Monarch. | Image Details

Some predators learn to avoid them because they taste bad, and so place the whole group of butterfly lookalikes on the “do not eat” list, according to U.S Fish and Wildlife Service biologist Lara Drizd.

Now that we know animals have the ability to mimic each other, brace yourself for the Batesian mimics! Batesian mimicry is biological trickery that consists of two elements, the model who’s toxic and the mimic who’s harmless. Similar to Müllerian mimics, the model has aposematic coloration (aka warning colors) and noxious chemicals; however, the mimic in this case is is neither poisonous nor venomous but has adapted to have similar warning coloration as the model. When predators see them, they tend to avoid the mimics and get duped!

The nonvenomous Arizona mountain kingsnake is the definition of “looks can be deceiving.” They’ve adapted to have a similar coloration to the venomous coral snake, but if you look closely, the two species’ color patterns are ordered differently.

With the venomous Arizona coral snake, notice their stripe colors go in order from black to yellow to red. As refuge manager Rob Vinson from Pahranaghat National Wildlife Refuge would say, “Red touches yellow, it kills a fellow

red touches black — venom lack.”

a yellow and black flying insect with two wings rests on a purple wildflower
Bee fly | Image Details

Another example, this bee fly resembles bees and wasps and even displays aggressive behavior. However, unlike their counterparts, they lack a stinger and have only two wings instead of four.

a green caterpillar with an enlarged thorax and false eyespots rests on a leaf
Spicebush caterpillar | Image Details
a green snake on a tree branch with head raised upward
Rough green snake | Image Details
a snake with a flattened head that resembles a cobra
Hognose snake looking a bit like a cobra | Image Details

The spicebush swallowtail caterpillar has false eyespots resembling a snake! Ooh so scaryyy! You can barely tell the difference.

While it hisses and flattens its neck just like a cobra when threatened, the hognose snake is completely harmless. When all else fails to deter the threat, it will go as far as playing dead like an opossum!

Aggressive Mimicry

Aggressive mimicry is a type of prank in which predators employ a visual lure to mimic a food source sought by their prey. By doing that they hoodwink their quarry right into their trap.

For example, the alligator snapping turtle is a very large turtle, but it’s a very well camouflaged predator. Its body looks like a harmless mottled rock or silty lake bottom, but when it opens its mouth, it shows a tongue with a fleshy pink extension wriggling like a worm! When fish go to eat the “worm” the turtle’s jaws snap down to eat the fish instead.

a large spider on its web that has a thick zig-zag pattern throughout
Argiope argentata | Image Details

Another good example of aggressive lure mimicry is the silver argiope spider. This spider found in south Texas spin complex patterns, such as zig-zags, in the middle of their webs.

The patterns reflect ultraviolet light, mimicking patterns that many flowers have, called nectar guides. Bees follow the ultraviolet guides in search of nectar, and then the silver argiope gets another meal. Bees have a good memory, and they can remember which patterns are in fact traps. To stay on the offensive, this spider changes its web pattern every day.

Wildlife are Expert Pranksters

The point of all this? It’s a good reminder that wildlife are champion pranksters and between crypsis and mimicry, they prank for survival!

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