




Biograpy: My name is Lyndsey and i go to Olathe North High School. I am a Jr. and this blog is for the student naturalist class that i am in. I love listening to music, writing, and drawing. All these things calm me and help me cope with the hectic life i have. Lately I have had the urge to do something realy spontaneous, like bungy jumping i think i just want a really big rush.
Essay:
Camouflage and mimicry are used in some oragainsims to protect them from predators. Mimicry is the similarities between two different species. and camouflage is an animals resembling an object. There are 3 types of mimicry, Batesian mimicry, Muellerian mimicry, and self-mimicry. Batesian mimicry refers to two or more species that have similar appearances, but only one has with spines, stingers, or toxic chemistry. The second one only has the defense of mimicing the other. Muellerian mimicry is when two species look exactly the same but are different. Self-mimicry is when an animal has one part the can be used to confuse the enemy into thinking its something that its not. Animals that use camouflage change their color to where they are at or they already have that type of coloring so the adapt to a certain environment. there are occurances sometimes when the best camouflage could be bright colors which are most of the time meaning danger and poisonus but some species that have this coloratio are faking it. a good example would be the butterflys or moths that have large eye patterns. they are vibrant but fool predators because they think it is a large snake. also a good example of mimicry would be the milk snake mimicing the coral snake. their coloring is almost exactly the same but if you look closly you can see the difference between the two. the colors are switched on the milke snake.
Web links that were used in the essay:
http://www.thewildones.org/Animals/camo.html
http://rainforests.mongabay.com/0306.htm
http://www.saczoo.com/3_kids/20_camouflage/camouflage_mimicry.htm
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Animal_Behavior/Mimicry_and_Camouflage
http://www.geocities.com/brisbane_insects/Mimicry.htm











