Animal Behavior
Animal Behavior
Animal Behavior
Defenses
AnimAl BehAvior
Animal Communication
Animal Courtship
Animal Defenses
Animal Hunting and Feeding
Animal Life in Groups
Animal Migration
Animal
Defenses
ChristinA WilsDon
Animal Behavior: Animal Defenses
Copyright 2009 by Infobase Publishing
Chelsea House
An imprint of Infobase Publishing
132 West 31st Street
New York NY 10001
Wilsdon, Christina.
Animal defenses / Christina Wilsdon.
p. cm. — (Animal behavior)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-1-60413-089-8 (hardcover)
1. Animal defenses. I. Title. II. Series.
QL759.W55 2009
591.47—dc22 2008040116
All links and Web addresses were checked and verified to be correct at the
time of publication. Because of the dynamic nature of the Web, some addresses
and links may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid.
Glossary 124
Bibliography 126
Further Resources 128
Picture Credits 130
Index 131
About the Author 136
1
Avoiding Danger
8 AnimAl deFenses
This female springbok, a kind of antelope, bounces into the air with an
arched back and stiff legs. This motion is called stotting or pronking.
Springbok typically use it to show predators that they are fi t and hard
to catch. Research shows that cheetahs often avoid hunting stotting
springbok.
careful not to give the cheetah any clues as to where their young
are hiding.
Like most wild animals, gazelles are always watching out for
danger. Most often, that danger is another animal—in this case,
a hungry cheetah. Even domestic animals, such as horses, sheep,
and chickens, are on the alert for any threat to their safety. Being
alert is the first step an animal takes to defend itself. It is one of
many behaviors that animals use to survive in a world filled with
predators.
Much of an animal’s self-defense behavior comes from within
it. Most animals are born “knowing” how to defend themselves.
Scientists call this inborn knowledge instinct.
selF-deFense
Over millions of years, the many different kinds, or species, of
animals have developed ways of defending themselves. Animals
might use protective colors, sharp spines, and excellent hearing.
An animal has its defensive tools at the ready all the time, wheth-
er or not it is in danger. They are known as primary defenses.
The gazelle’s primary defenses include its horns, its keen senses,
and its speed. A gazelle fawn’s primary defenses include its ability
to lie still and its concealing coat color.
An animal’s primary defenses are backed up by behaviors
known as secondary defenses. The animal uses its secondary
defenses when it confronts a predator. A gazelle uses secondary
defenses when it stamps, stots, and runs away—or if it is caught
by a cheetah or other predator.
Gazelle fawns use the most basic form of self-defense: avoid
being noticed. Like the fawns, many animals evade detection by
hiding, freezing, or blending in with their habitat. This is called
crypsis (crypsis comes from a Greek word that means “hidden.”)
10 AnimAl deFenses
lying low
Many animals hide to avoid being noticed. Turn over a stone
or stir a pile of leaves to reveal a world of hidden creatures: a
worm squirming in the sudden burst of light, a rolled-up pill
bug, a centipede quickly scurrying out of sight, tiny springtails,
and even tinier mites. Trees and other plants harbor animals
seeking hideaways. Insects hide under leaves, along stems, and
under scraps of bark. Pale trails winding through a leaf show
where the larvae, or young, of various moths and beetles are
feeding safely between the leaf’s layers. Etchings in a tree’s bark
show where beetles have bored inside to feed on its wood while
under cover.
Many insects even alter plants to create places to hide. Some
caterpillars roll up leaves and seal them shut with sticky silk.
Weaver ants seal leaves together with silk made by their larvae,
which the adult ants use as if they were glue sticks. Some insects,
including species of aphids, midges, and wasps, spur plants to
grow protective cases. These cases, called galls, are hard knobs
with spongy interiors. As larvae feed on the plant, their saliva
induces the growth of these galls.
Larger animals also take advantage of the safe shelter pro-
vided by plants, rocks, and other parts of their habitat. Birds hide
their nests amid grasses, tuck them among branches, bury them
deep inside burrows, and conceal them in tree holes.
Staying hidden for many hours is not necessary for an ani-
mal that can get to a hiding place quickly. Many small rodents
feed close to their burrows so they can dive into them at the first
glimpse of a hawk overhead. Crabs scuttle swiftly beneath stones.
The pancake tortoise of East Africa, which has a flat, flexible
shell, wedges itself into a crevice between rocks. The turtle brac-
es its legs so that it cannot easily be pulled out of its hiding spot.
The chuckwalla, a lizard that lives in the southwestern United
Avoiding danger 11
States, also darts into crevices. Then, it inflates its lungs with air
so that its body swells up, wedging it in place.
A liFe in hiding
A variety of species go to the extreme: They spend most of their
lives in hiding. Over millions of years, they have adapted to sur-
viving in habitats that keep them under cover.
Many kinds of clams, for example, burrow into sandy or
muddy beaches. Some species live just under the surface, while
others dig deeply. A large clam called the geoduck can bury itself
3 feet (1 meter) below the surface.
By burrowing, a clam protects itself from being washed away
by waves, drying out in the sun, and being an easy target for
12 AnimAl deFenses
predators. It does not need to leave its hiding place to find food. In-
stead, the clam opens its paired shells and reaches up through the
sand with a body part called a siphon. The siphon takes in water,
which the clam filters to extract particles of food.
If the clam senses vibrations rippling through the sand, it
quickly pulls in its siphon. Vibrations may mean a predator is
investigating its hiding spot. The clam also may burrow more
deeply to escape. Some clams can dig quickly: The razor clam
can move 9 inches (22 centimeters) in 1 minute.
Other animals find safety in living underground, too. Earth-
worms spend much of the day burrowing through the soil. If
caught by a bird’s probing beak, an earthworm struggles to resist
being yanked out of the ground. It grabs onto the walls of its
burrow with bristles that line its sides. The worm’s hind end also
bulges to help clamp it in place.
A mole digging through the earth can send earthworms
scuttling out of the soil. Moles eat earthworms and even store
them for later, biting them and then stuffing them into holes in
their tunnels. A mole rarely needs to poke its head above ground;
there, an owl, fox, or weasel might pounce on it.
stAying still
A prey animal that senses danger does not always seek a hiding
place. Some species first try another way of avoiding detection:
freezing in place. Many predators can easily spot prey in motion,
but are less likely to notice a still animal, especially if it blends
into the background.
A moving rabbit out in the open, for example, is an easy tar-
get for a hawk. To avoid being spotted, the rabbit crouches low
and freezes in place. Its stillness reduces the chances of it being
seen, and its low profile makes it look more like a mound of dirt
than a round-bodied animal sitting on the ground.
Avoiding danger 13
ESCAPE HATCHES
Animals dig dwellings underground for many reasons. A
den or burrow provides relief from extreme heat or cold.
it can serve as a nursery for helpless young. some animals
store food in their burrows. A handy burrow also provides
a safe spot when a predator appears.
prairie dogs, which live on the grasslands of the unit-
ed states, build extensive communities of burrows called
towns. At the sight of a predator, a prairie dog immediately
alerts its family and neighbors with shrill barks. in a flash,
the prairie dogs dive into their burrows and out of sight.
their tunnels, which spread far, wide, and deep, provide
the animals with many hideouts and escape routes.
diggers, such as chipmunks and ground squirrels, also
include emergency exits in their homes. that way, there’s
an escape route if a badger digs up the burrow or a snake
slips into it. African mammals called meerkats have hun-
dreds of tunnels called “bolt holes” in their territory. if a
predator appears, they run, or “bolt,” into them.
In much the same way, newborn deer lie still among ferns
and grasses while their mothers spend time away from them,
feeding on leaves. The fawns, born without any odor that would
lure a predator, rely on their stillness as well as their spots to
avoid detection on the sun-dappled woodland floor. Pronghorn
antelope fawns remain still for hours on end, lying in tall grass
to escape the notice of coyotes and eagles. The chicks of spotted
sandpipers and many other birds also crouch and freeze when
danger threatens.
Though many crouch-and-freeze creatures also benefit
from coloration that helps them blend in with their background,
such camouflage is not a requirement for “the freeze” to work. A
squirrel, for example, is usually a highly visible animal as it bus-
ily dashes along branches or springs across a lawn. Should a dog
or other animal threaten it, however, the squirrel scrambles up
a tree trunk, circles to the side of the trunk opposite the preda-
tor, and freezes. If the predator follows it, the squirrel scurries
to the other side of the trunk and freezes again. Using this spi-
raling method, the squirrel keeps a blockade between it and its
attacker—even if the attacker is incapable of climbing the tree in
pursuit.
Walkingsticks are insects that look like twigs. They are able to blend in
with trees to avoid predators.
hide the roundness of its body, making it look flat. Colors and
patterns also can help hide an animal’s shadow.
Cryptic coloration can be as simple as the sandy fur of a fen-
nec fox, which blends with the tones of its desert home. It can be
as complex as the camouflage of a giant swallowtail caterpillar,
which looks like a bird dropping on a leaf. The fox “hides in plain
sight,” while the caterpillar stays safe by resembling something
that does not interest a predator one bit.
Many cryptically colored animals just need to freeze or
lie low to be protected. A pointy thorn bug sitting on a stem,
for example, looks like a thorn. A grasshopper or katydid that
16 AnimAl deFenses
The potoo holds its body at an angle that makes it look like just
another dead branch. On the other side of the globe, a look-alike
nocturnal bird called the tawny frogmouth poses the same way.
Another bird actor is the American bittern, which lives in
wetlands. When it is startled, it stretches its long, thin neck and
body and points its sharp bill to the sky. In this position, the
streaks of brown running down its breast blend in with the tall,
grassy plants around it. The bittern also sways gently, just like
the breeze-ruffled reeds.
chAnging color
Sometimes, an animal’s camouflage won’t work if the habitat
changes or an animal travels to another part of its habitat. A
number of animals solve this problem by changing color.
Some animals change color as the seasons change. The wil-
low ptarmigan, an Arctic bird, is mottled brown in summer
and blends in with the ground, rocks, and plants. In winter, it
is white with a black tail and nearly disappears against a back-
ground of snow and occasional twigs. In spring and fall, as it
molts (sheds) old feathers and grows new ones, the bird is a
mixture of brown and white—just like the patchy snow-spotted
world around it.
Some animals change color within weeks or days. Many
caterpillars change color as they grow, shedding a skin of one
color to reveal another that can protect them better as they
move about more to feed. Crab spiders can change color in just
a few days to match the flowers in which they lurk. Bark bugs
of Central America grow darker when moistened with water.
This helps them blend in with rain-darkened tree trunks.
Some reptiles, fish, and other creatures can change color in
just a few hours. Many tree frogs, for example, can go from green
to brown. Horned lizards of the southwestern United States can
Avoiding danger 19
The feathers of the willow ptarmigan change color with the seasons:
white in winter months to blend with snow and brown or mixed colors
in other months to blend with plants and the earth. This enables the
bird to often be naturally camouflaged from predators.
change their brown and gray tones to best fit their surroundings.
The flounder, a flat-bodied fish with its eyes on the side of its
head, lies on the ocean floor and takes on the color and texture
of the sandy, stony surface in as little as two hours.
Other animals work even faster. Many octopuses, cuttlefish,
and squids can change color in less than one second. An octopus
can change from solid red to multiple colors, or even white, to
match its background. It can also change the texture of its skin
to resemble sand or stones. A cuttlefish can make light and dark
waves ripple down its back, reflecting the way sunlight shimmers
in water.
20 AnimAl deFenses
Fleeing
An animal without a burrow or other hiding place can choose
between fight and flight. It can stand its ground and face a preda-
tor or make a quick getaway. Fighting may be used as a last re-
sort; fleeing is the first response to danger.
Many long-legged, hoofed animals literally run for their
lives, relying on sheer speed to escape. Horses, for example, can
gallop at speeds of 30 miles (48 kilometers) per hour or more.
22
escape Artists 23
more. The rhea, a flightless bird of South America, can also run
swiftly and turn on a dime. Roadrunners of the southwestern
United States deserts can fly, but prefer to run. They can zip
along at 18.6 miles (30 km) an hour.
The basilisk lizard normally gets around on four legs, but
switches to two when it’s threatened. The lizard lives in trees in
rainforests of Central America. When a predator creeps up on it,
the basilisk drops out of the tree and lands in the water. Then, it
rises on its hind legs and runs across the surface of the water. The
basilisk dashes about 15 feet (4.5 m) in three seconds flat before
dropping forward to swim with all four legs.
A kangaroo cannot run, but it can leap away from danger. A
red kangaroo can hop at 20 miles (32 km) an hour for long dis-
tances, and 30 miles (48 km) an hour for a short distance. Some
people have clocked red kangaroos going even faster. Grasshop-
pers and crickets leap to safety, too. Beach hoppers, which are
related to pill bugs, pop into the air by snapping their abdomens
and pushing with four of their hind legs.
Swimming, slithering, climbing, and flying from danger all
work just as well as running and jumping. An octopus, for exam-
ple, escapes predators by filling its body with water, then pushing
the water out through a tube-like body part called a siphon. This
motion, called jetting, lets an octopus scoot away quickly in any
direction. As it jets away, it emits a cloud of ink to hide its escape
and further confuse its pursuer. Shellfish called scallops also jet
away from danger. When a scallop senses that a sea star is near,
it opens and shuts its shell, forcing out jets of water that scoot it
away.
Another ocean creature, the flying fish, escapes predators by
swimming quickly just under the water’s surface, then streaking
up and out of the water while stretching out a pair of wing-like
fins. It sails through the air for up to 20 seconds before diving
back into the water.
escape Artists 25
stArtling A predAtor
Anyone who has jumped when startled knows how a predator
might feel when its prey suddenly bursts into motion after being
nearly invisible. The shock of the prey’s sudden reappearance is
ELUDING BATS
Bats hunt on the wing at night. they send out pulses of
sound and listen for the echoes to locate their prey. this
process is called echolocation. using it, a bat can pinpoint
even tiny insects in flight.
insects have developed escape behaviors to avoid echo-
location. some moths can hear the high-pitched sounds
that bats send out. A moth may fly in loops to avoid being
detected. if a moth senses that a bat is close, it will simply
fold its wings and drop from the sky.
some moths go one step further and jam the bat’s sig-
nals. A moth does this by making sounds that are similar to
the echoes that the bat is trying to hear. this can throw the
bat off course just long enough to help the moth escape.
scientists have recently discovered that some moths
make sounds that warn bats not to eat them because they
taste bad. Bats quickly learn to avoid these moths after a
few taste tests. some species of moth that do not taste
bad imitate the sounds of the foul-tasting ones, which
tricks the bats into steering clear of them, too.
escape Artists 2
Patches of color that do not look like eyes also make effective
startle displays. These colors are often hidden until an animal
flees. The sudden appearance of this flash coloration can stop a
predator in its tracks just long enough to let the prey escape.
A red-eyed tree frog, for example, usually blends in with the
leaf on which it sleeps. If a predator bothers it, the frog first pops
open its enormous red eyes. Then it leaps away, turning from a
plain green frog into a rainbow of color as its orange-footed legs
unfold and its blue and yellow sides appear. This sudden splash of
color startles the predator and buys the frog time to get away.
Octopuses also abruptly give up on camouflage when they
are under attack. An alarmed octopus can burst into startling
colors or patterns in less than a second. A fish or turtle that sees
A flash of the red-eyed tree frog’s large red eyes can surprise predators,
and give it time to escape.
Escape Artists 29
BLUFFING
Startle displays are often part of a behavior called bluffing.
Bluffing is a tactic used by animals to make them “look
tough” to a predator. An animal that may be completely
harmless acts as if it is actually quite ferocious and pos-
sibly dangerous. A predator may back off rather than risk
getting injured.
Many lizards combine a startle display with a bluff. A
chameleon facing a predator, for example, may suddenly
turn dark as it puffs up its body to look larger. It also hiss-
es, often revealing a brightly colored mouth.
The frilled lizard of Australia confronts predators with
a wide-open yellow or pink mouth. It adds to this dis-
play by opening huge flaps of skin on its neck, which are
splotched with red, orange, black, and white. The big frills
make the lizard look much larger and more intimidating.
Another Australian lizard, the bearded dragon, likewise
gapes its yellow-lined mouth and raises a beard of spiky
skin under its chin. The beard also turns blue-black.
deFlecting An AttAck
Startle displays and bluffs can help an animal escape in the nick
of time. Another tactic is to trick a predator into attacking the
“wrong” part of its prey or misjudging which direction the prey
will go as it tries to escape. An animal can live to see another
day if it can keep its head and body safe by getting a predator to
merely nip its tail instead.
Colors, markings, and behaviors that encourage a predator
to focus on the wrong end of its prey are called deflection dis-
plays because they redirect, or deflect, an attack.
Deflection displays often make use of eyespots. Unlike eye-
spots that are flashed to scare a predator, these eyespots show on
an animal’s hind end at all times. They draw a predator’s atten-
tion away from the prey’s head. As a predator lunges, it focuses
on the prominent eyespot at the prey’s tail end instead of on the
prey’s head. The prey’s actual eyes may be hidden among stripes
or spots.
Eyespots like these are common among fish, especially
coral-reef species such as butterfly fish. The four-eyed butterfly
fish, for example, has false eyes near its tail that look just like its
real eyes. The threadfin butterfly fish has a dark spot on a fin
toward its rear. A dark stripe on its head runs through its actual
eye, which make it less noticeable. Angled stripes on its sides also
guide a predator’s eye toward its tail. If attacked, each fish may
lose a bit of its tail, but escape with its life.
Escape Artists 31
A juvenile emperor angelfi sh has an eyespot near its tail, which makes a
predator focus on the wrong end.
butterfl ies have hind wings tipped with fake legs and antennae.
Scientists have noticed that some of these butterfl ies will even
creep backward along a stem for a second or two after landing,
which might help fool a nearby predator. One butterfly found
in Malaysia has such a convincing “head” on its hind end that it
is sometimes called the back-to-front butterfly.
Other insects rely on false heads to dodge predators, too.
A lanternfly of Southeast Asia has antennae lookalikes dangling
from the ends of its wings near a pair of eyespots. When the
wings are folded, the lanternfly’s tail looks like a head. The insect
even walks backward when it senses danger. Some lanternflies
turn this trick around and have heads that look like tails.
The giant desert centipede of the southwestern United
States is not an insect, but it uses the false-head trick, too. Its
tail end looks just like its head, right down to antennae-like at-
tachments. If a predator grabs the centipede’s hind end because
it mistakes it for the head, the centipede can twist around and
bite it.
The shingleback skink, a lizard of Australia, also uses this
tactic. Its stumpy head and tail look nearly identical. A predator
that grabs the wrong “head” will be surprised to see the skink
scurry off in the opposite direction.
Many snakes also use the two-headed trick. They roll up in
a ball and hide their heads in their coils when under attack. Then
they wave their tails to threaten the predator and deflect its at-
tack. These snakes sometimes have bright colors on their tails
that enhance this trick. Southeast Asian snakes called kraits, for
example, wave red tails.
The ring-necked snake of North America coils its tail to dis-
play the bright orange-red underside. The color and coiling can
distract a predator. In Africa, the shovel-snouted snake coils its
tail, too. Other kinds of snakes even jab their tails at their attack-
ers as if they were going to bite them.
Escape Artists 33
can release some of their arms if they are attacked. The wrig-
gling arms distract the predator and let the prey escape. Large
tropical centipedes also toss off legs if they feel threatened.
The lost legs writhe and even make squeaky noises to distract
predators. Octopuses grow new limbs. Centipedes don’t, but
they have so many legs that the loss of a few doesn’t harm
them.
A crab also can drop a claw or leg if attacked. Some species
pinch their attackers first and then release the pinched claw. The
crab runs away while the predator frantically tries to remove the
painful claw. Lobsters also release their claws in this way. Crabs
and lobsters replace the claws over time as they molt and grow
new outer coverings called exoskeletons.
Insects and spiders, such as the daddy longlegs, have legs
that are easily pulled off by predators. They do not grow new
legs, but get around just fine with the remaining ones.
Some geckos save their skins by losing them. These geck-
os are covered with an outer layer of skin that is only loosely
connected to the skin underneath. The outer layer slips off if a
predator grabs them. The gecko scurries away as if it had simply
popped out of a sleeping bag.
Birds cannot shed their skins, but they can lose feathers.
Normally, a bird’s feathers cannot easily be pulled out. However,
a predator that grabs a bird’s tail is often left with a mouthful
of feathers. This feather loss is called fright molting. Some sci-
entists think it may help a bird wriggle out of the clutches of an
owl or other predator, just as a butterfly sheds wing scales as it
struggles to escape a spider’s web. They also think that a bird can
fright molt in midair, leaving a burst of feathers behind it that
might deflect a hawk’s attack.
Though many animals lose parts of their outsides to defend
themselves, some species of sea cucumbers lose their insides in-
stead. These plump, slippery ocean animals usually are protected
escape Artists 35
plAying deAd
A variety of animals escape death by playing dead. This defense
is called death feigning. Animals that play dead may seem as if
they are offering themselves up on a platter. Yet, many predators
hunt prey in response to movement. Many animals also do not
eat prey that they have not killed. By playing dead, an animal
may make its attacker lose interest. A predator may also get care-
less if its prey seems to be dead. It may relax its grip and give the
prey a chance to escape.
Many insects are known to feign death. These insect actors
include many species of beetles, grasshoppers, stick insects, and
caterpillars. Some insects curl up and remain still. Others let go
of branches and drop to the ground. Certain reptiles, such as
chameleons and many tree snakes, also drop to the ground and
lie still.
Many birds also go limp when caught by a predator, and
then instantly “come back to life” at the fi rst chance for escape.
Baby ospreys play dead in the nest when their mother gives a
warning call.
Going limp and lying still works well for many animals, but
a few species deserve Academy Awards for their death-feigning
skills. Among these “best actors” are the opossum and the hog-
nose snake, both found in North America.
An opossum defends itself at first by growling, hissing, and
showing its teeth. If this does not frighten away the dog or other
36 AnimAl deFenses
The opossum keeps predators away by curling up and playing dead. This
pretend act is the reason for the phrase “playing possum,” which means
to fake being dead.
escape Artists 3
38
Animal Armor 39
Sea urchins, like this common sea urchin found along the coast of Scot-
land, use their bristles for moving as well as defense.
razor-like spines on either side of the tail. The fish slashes at at-
tackers with these spines.
Sticklebacks are named for the spines that stick up on their
backs. A stickleback can lock these spines in an upright position.
The number of spines varies, as shown by their names, which
range from three- to fifteen-spined stickleback.
The porcupine fish’s name is likewise a clue to its defense.
This fish is covered with sharp spines. When threatened, the
fish inflates its body with water, and the spines stick out in all
directions. This makes the fish too big for some predators to
42 AnimAl deFenses
This thorny devil shows off its spikes of many sizes as it walks along a
street in the Northern Territory, Australia.
Animal Armor 43
horned lizard has spines running down its sides, back, and tail.
Strong, sharp horns jut from its head, making it look like a tiny
triceratops. If a predator threatens it, a horned lizard puffs up its
body so that its spines stick out. It also turns its head to present
its horns. Some species can also squirt blood from the corners of
their eyes. The blood can shoot out up to 3 feet (1 m). The blood
tastes bad, so the squirt both surprises and disgusts a predator.
The armadillo lizard of southern Africa is also spiky. It
makes the most of its spikes by rolling into a ball and grabbing
its tail in its mouth when threatened. This turns the lizard into
a prickly doughnut.
Mammals also make use of spines for protection. Porcupines,
for example, fend off predators with spines called quills. There
are about 25 species of porcupine. About half of them are found
in Europe, Asia, and Africa. The rest are found in Central and
South America, with one species living in North America.
A North American porcupine is covered with about 30,000
long, sharp quills. The quills range from half an inch (1.3 cm) to
5 inches (12.7 cm) long. A porcupine warns enemies before they
attack. It lowers its head, lifts its tail, and raises its quills and
rattles them. It also clacks its teeth, stamps its feet, and gives off
a very strong smell from a patch of skin on its back.
If the attacker persists, the porcupine will back up toward
it and whack it with its tail. The quills, which are barbed at the
end, pop off the porcupine and stick in the attacker’s skin. They
are painful and can actually drill deeper into skin and muscles
over time.
The African crested porcupine also warns predators not to
mess with it. It shakes its tail, making a loud rattling noise with a
clump of special, hollow quills. This porcupine also raises quills
on its back that can be up to 20 inches (50 cm) long and are boldly
striped in black and white. As a last resort, it will run sideways or
backward to jab its quills into its foe.
44 AnimAl deFenses
shells
A sturdy shell is the primary defense for a variety of very slow-
moving animals, such as turtles, tortoises, snails, and clams.
Turtles and tortoises are reptiles with bodies enclosed in
shells. Turtles spend much or all of their lives in water, while
tortoises live on land. Both have shells made of two parts: an
upper section called the carapace and a lower section called the
plastron.
The shell is basically a sturdy box made of bone. The inside of
the carapace is made of bones fused together. These bones include
the turtle’s spine and ribs. The plastron is made of bone, too.
In most species, the outside of the carapace is covered with
plates made of a tough material called keratin—the same sub-
stance that forms hooves and fingernails. These plates are called
scutes. Some turtles have just a few scutes embedded in a thick
skin on the carapace. Some have none at all.
Many turtles can pull their heads, tails, and legs partly or
fully into their shells. Box turtles have hinged plastrons, so they
can close the openings in their shells. Desert tortoises fold their
thick, scaly legs in front of their withdrawn heads to form a
shield. A turtle can stay inside its shell for hours, waiting for a
predator to give up. It will stay tucked in while a predator sniffs
it or rolls it around.
Animal Armor 4
For slow-moving animals like the snail, a shell is a primary defense. This
snail is resting on a leaf, but it can quickly disappear inside its shell if it
senses a threat.
INSECT ARMOR
most insects’ tough exoskeletons protect their bod-
ies from predators and from drying out. however, some
insects—including young insects, such as caterpillars—have
soft bodies. they benefit by adding an extra layer of pro-
tective armor.
scale insects, for example, are named for the armor
they produce. A young scale insect finds a spot on a plant
where it can feed. then its body oozes substances that form
a shield over it. the insect lives underneath this shield.
different kinds of scale insects make different kinds
of shields. Armored scale insects make hard, waxy shields.
soft scale insects make softer waxy coverings, or shields
that look like balls of cotton. ground pearls, which are re-
lated to scale insects, make round, waxy covers that look
like beads.
caterpillars of some moths make a sticky, bumpy cov-
ering for their bodies. Ants that bite these caterpillars end
up with jaws full of goo. the ants’ bodies and legs also
become coated with the slime. the ants must work hard to
scrape off the sticky material, which keeps them too busy
to try to attack again.
With the exception of its ears and belly, the nine-banded armadillo is
completely covered by a bony armor. It can, however, tuck its limbs and
head into its armor and huddle close to the ground to protect its belly.
50 AnimAl deFenses
Only the tail, fins, eyes, and mouth stick out of a boxfi sh’s boxy suit of
armor, which is created by linked scales.
Animal armor also includes the bony scales of fish. Fish scales
overlap to form a flexible but strong covering. The squared-off
bodies of boxfish have scales that link together to make a boxy
suit of armor. A boxfish’s tail, fins, eyes, and mouth stick out of
the box.
Sharks have skin covered with tiny, sharp teeth called “skin
teeth” or dermal denticles. The denticles make the skin as rough
as sandpaper. A shark’s skin is like a strong but flexible suit of
chain mail. A great white shark’s skin is so dense with denticles
that it even helps protect it from the bites of other sharks.
Crocodiles and alligators also have armor-like skin. Like
other reptiles, they have tough, horn-like scales in their skin.
Unlike most other reptiles, they also have strong bony plates
embedded in the skin.
A rhinoceros does not have scales, but it does have thick skin.
A rhino’s skin ranges from about three-quarters of an inch (18
mm) deep in some places to nearly 2 inches (45 mm) on its shoul-
ders. This helps protect a rhino from a predator’s fangs and claws.
The rhino also has a formidable horn. The only rhino likely to be
attacked by a predator is an unguarded calf.
ROLLING UP AS A DEFENSE
three-banded armadillos and pangolins are not the only
armored animals that roll up in the face of danger. small,
armadillo-like invertebrates called pill bugs roll up, too.
pill bugs are crustaceans, a group of animals that includes
shrimp, crabs, and lobsters. the word crustacean comes
from a latin word meaning “crust” or “shell.” it refers to
the hard exoskeletons of these animals.
A pill bug can roll up so tightly that it looks like a small
gray pea. sowbugs are related to pill bugs, but cannot roll
up. they must scurry away to escape predators such as
spiders and centipedes. pill millipedes and some kinds of
cockroaches also can roll up when in danger.
many snakes also curl up in a ball when threatened.
one group of snakes, the ball pythons, is named for this
behavior.
When in danger, pill bugs are able to use their segmented bod-
ies to roll up into little pea-sized balls.
54 AnimAl deFenses
high into the air and drops it onto rocks to smash it apart. The
vulture uses this same behavior to smash open a turtle’s shell.
Gulls use this behavior, too. They carry clams and other
shelled animals into the air, and then drop them onto rocks
and roads. Crows likewise drop snails onto hard surfaces. Song
thrushes hold snails in their beaks and bash them against favorite
stones, which are known as thrush anvils.
A bird called the snail kite is named for its habit of eating
almost nothing but apple snails. Its slim, hooked bill fits neatly
into the spiral of an apple snail’s shell. The bill’s sharp tip snips a
muscle in the snail, releasing the snail from its shell.
The oystercatcher, a bird that feeds on ocean shores, patrols
shellfish beds to look for mussels or oysters with slightly opened
shells. The bird stabs its long, sharp bill into one of these open
shells, quickly cutting the muscles that clamp the shell closed.
An oystercatcher may also open a shell by bashing at the hinge
from the outside.
A sea snail gets past a clam’s armor by using its raspy tongue
to drill a hole in the shell. A sea star wraps its suckered arms
around a clamshell and pulls. Eventually, the clam gets tired and
the shell opens. Immediately, the sea star’s stomach oozes out of
its body and into the shell, where it digests the clam.
A sea star can even slip its stomach around a sea urchin’s
spines. A sunflower star is big enough to engulf a sea urchin and
digest it, then “spit out” the shell and spines. A triggerfish also
eats sea urchins. It flips them over, plucks off their spines, and
then uses its strong teeth to bite through the shell.
Mammals have figured out ways to get around their prey’s
armor, too. A weasel-like animal called the fisher, for example,
quickly flips over prickly porcupines so it can attack their soft
undersides. Wolves, wolverines, and bobcats also prey on por-
cupines. A sea otter carries a stone underwater and uses it as a
hammer to knock sea snails called abalone off rocks.
4
Bad Smells, Bad Tastes, and
Powerful Poisons
55
56 AnimAl deFenses
poisonous prey
A poisonous animal has poison in its body. It does not typically
have a special body part, such as a sting, for injecting the poison.
Instead, a predator comes in contact with the poison when it seiz-
es or eats the poisonous animal. Sometimes a predator learns its
mistake while eating its prey—or even after it has swallowed it.
A bird that grabs the poisonous monarch butterfly will get a
taste of the poison. This is often enough to make the bird drop
the monarch. The bird learns that a monarch is an unpleasant
meal, and the monarch escapes.
If the bird swallows the monarch, it regrets it. The mon-
arch’s poison does not kill the bird, but it does make the bird feel
sick and throw up. Most birds remember this lesson for a long
time and do not attempt to catch monarchs again. Scientists have
found that the mere sight of a monarch can cause these “edu-
cated” birds to gag and retch, as if they were about to be sick.
Many poisonous animals produce foul fluids that cling to
the predator or entrap it. The pill millipede, for example, oozes
sticky droplets when it is attacked. The droplets stick to preda-
tors such as ants. As the ants frantically try to clean off the fluid,
they gum themselves up even more. Meanwhile, the millipede
escapes. A spider that eats a pill millipede will be paralyzed for
several days. The poison even can affect birds and mice.
Some animals’ poison can kill predators. A few species of
millipedes, for example, ooze droplets that release a poisonous
gas called hydrogen cyanide. Shutting one of these millipedes in
a jar with other small living things will cause the animals to die
from the fumes. The poison gas made by just one millipede can
Bad smells, Bad tastes, and powerful poisons 5
The colorful, tiny poison dart frog can excrete poison from its skin when
threatened.
kill more than six mice. Toads that seize such a millipede quickly
spit it out. Some beetle larvae, centipedes, moths, and caterpillars
also make hydrogen cyanide.
Poison dart frogs (also called poison arrow frogs), which live
in Central and South America, excrete a poisonous, foul-tasting
fluid from their skin when threatened. Some of these tiny frogs,
which are small enough to perch on a quarter, produce poison
strong enough to kill predators. In fact, they received their name
from the fact that natives sometimes carefully extract the frogs’
poison and coat the tips, or darts, of their arrows with it to catch
and kill other animals. The most toxic is the golden frog. Just one
drop of its poison can kill thousands of mice.
58 AnimAl deFenses
wArning colors
Bright colors help many animals find others of their species
and communicate with them. They may also help hide animals
in their habitats. Yet, bright colors can also be warning colors.
Many animals that are poisonous, bad tasting, or both are clad in
warning colors. The colors say to predators, “Don’t even think of
attacking me. You’ll be sorry.”
A predator that licks, mouths, or bites an animal with warn-
ing colors often drops or spits out its prey. The prey may taste
bad, or irritate the predator’s mouth. If the prey’s poison is strong,
it may also make the predator feel sick and throw up. After one or
more experiences like this, the predator learns that it is a bad idea
to attack this sort of prey. It is unlikely to go after another animal
that looks like this disastrous meal.
Disgusting or sickening a predator in this way may be a bet-
ter strategy for a prey animal than killing the predator. It is use-
ful to have “educated” predators in the neighborhood—predators
that will steer clear of the prey.
The most widely used warning colors are red, orange, yellow,
black, or a combination of these. The iron-cross blister beetle,
for example, has a black body, red head, and yellow wing covers
marked with black bands. Like other blister beetles, it oozes ir-
ritating oil when seized by a predator. The oil causes blisters to
form on the predator’s skin.
Another noxious animal, the koppie foam grasshopper of
South Africa, is black with red stripes. If it is attacked, a smelly,
Bad smells, Bad tastes, and powerful poisons 59
poisonous foam bubbles from its body. The foam not only makes
the grasshopper taste bad, but it also is strong enough to kill a
dog. Likewise, the lubber grasshopper of the southeastern United
States is clad in warning colors of black and yellow. It also bubbles
an irritating foam that is toxic enough to kill a bird. Opossums
that swallow a lubber quickly throw it up.
Ladybugs with bright red shells and black dots are also wear-
ing warning colors. The bright pattern signals that the ladybug
may sicken or kill a small animal that eats it. A bird, lizard, or in-
sect that ignores the warning and grabs the ladybug gets a second
warning in the form of a smelly, bad-tasting yellow liquid that
A cinnabar caterpillar is foul tasting and poisonous, and its orange and
black warning colors are meant to keep predators away.
60 AnimAl deFenses
oozes from the insect’s joints. This oozing is called reflex bleed-
ing. In addition to smelling and tasting awful, the fluid clogs up
an insect predator’s jaws. The ladybug’s orange-and-black young
also use reflex bleeding as a defense.
Moths, butterflies, and caterpillars that are poor-tasting or
poisonous have warning colors as well. The white, black, and yel-
low caterpillar of the monarch butterfly, for example, is poison-
ous. The orange-and-black-striped caterpillars of the cinnabar
moth are poisonous, too.
European magpie moths are boldly patterned at every stage
of life. In their youth, their white, black, and red caterpillars ooze
foul-tasting fluid that causes predators to spit them out. The cat-
erpillars form cocoons that are glossy black and ringed with yel-
low stripes. The adult moths that hatch have white, black, and
yellow markings.
POISONOUS BIRDS
in recent years, scientists have found that some birds
might have warning colors—and that the birds are not only
distasteful but also poisonous. the birds they studied live
in rainforests in new guinea.
one of these birds is the hooded pitohui, an orange
bird with a black face and tail and black wings. in 1990, a
researcher who licked his finger after being scratched by a
pitohui reported that his tongue and lips tingled, burned,
and then went numb for a few hours.
After more research, scientists found that the pitohui’s
feathers and skin contained poison. smaller amounts of
poison were also found in some of the birds’ muscles and
organs. Furthermore, it was the same kind of poison found
in poison dart frogs.
people living in new guinea’s forests already knew to
avoid the pitohui. they called it the “garbage bird” and told
scientists that just being near it made them sneeze and
made their noses, mouths, and eyes burn. people who ate
the birds felt sick to their stomachs.
scientists now want to find out how the birds became
poisonous. they have found the same poison in a red-and-
black beetle that pitohuis eat, so the birds might have be-
come poisonous by eating poison themselves.
since 1990, other species of poisonous pitohuis have
been studied. scientists have also found that another new
guinean bird, the blue-capped ifrita, contains the same
poison. Again, the native people already knew this. their
word for this species means “bitter bird.”
Some stink bugs are brightly colored, such as the red and
black two-spotted stink bug, but others are green or brown and
blend in with their surroundings. Most walkingstick insects are
also well camouflaged because they look like green or brown
twigs. Not so the Peruvian walkingstick, which calls attention
to itself with vivid red, black, and yellow markings. Its pattern
warns “stay away,” and so does the strong-smelling white fluid it
oozes when it senses a threat. The fluid irritates any ant or spider
that persists in trying to eat the walkingstick.
The caterpillars of different swallowtail butterfly species have
warning colors, camouflage, or eyespots for startling predators.
away. The strong odor comes from fluids that ooze from pores in
the millipede’s sides.
A millipede may let out fluid only from the pores close to the
site of the attack. If this is not enough, it will discharge fluid from
the rest of its pores, too. The fluid from some millipedes is not
only smelly and irritating, but also sticky. Ants that attack such
millipedes become slimed with the gluey fluids and must work
hard to free themselves.
smells bad, but also irritates the predator’s nose, mouth, and eyes.
It can even temporarily blind the predator. After spraying, the
skunk toddles off, leaving its victim pawing at its face.
Some snakes, such as the grass snake of Europe, have glands
that release terrible-smelling fluid from their hind ends when
they are caught. The green woodhoopoe, an African bird, pokes
its tail out of its nest hole and sprays a smelly fluid from a gland
at its base. The fluid, which smells worse than rotten eggs, repels
predators such as snakes and rats. Other birds use droppings to
repel enemies. A duck called the eider, for example, spews strong-
smelling droppings on its eggs just before it flees from its nest if
frightened by a predator.
Many kinds of beetles spray repulsive fluids from their hind
ends, too. The darkling beetle of the southwestern United States
reacts to a predator by practically standing on its head. Then it
sprays fluid from the end of its abdomen. The spray repels ants,
birds, lizards, and some rodents. A ground beetle of the south-
eastern United States sprays acid at ants that attack it. Carrion
beetles, which feed on animal carcasses, also spray smelly, irritat-
ing fluid at ants, spiders, and other predators.
Many species of ants spray, too. Carpenter ants, for example,
do not have stingers. Instead, they bite enemies with their jaws
and then spray acid from their hind ends into the wounds. This
acid is also used to kill the insects they eat.
The champion tail-tip sprayers among insects are bom-
bardier beetles, found nearly worldwide. A bombardier beetle
stores the different chemicals that make up its spray in differ-
ent parts of its abdomen. If the beetle is attacked, it empties the
chemicals stored in one part of its abdomen into the chamber
that holds the rest of the brew. They combine to form an ex-
plosive, hot fluid that bursts out of the beetle’s hind end with a
loud pop.
Bad smells, Bad tastes, and powerful poisons 6
get hit will carry the terrible smell with them for days. They also
may be chilly: Feathers and fur soaked with the fishy oil will do
a poor job of keeping an animal warm in the cold places where
many seabirds nest. Scientists who study these birds wear water-
proof clothing when they are at work.
BORROWING POISON
Some poisonous animals make their own poison. Others use
poison made by other living things. Scientists have discovered
that these animals are able to eat poisonous meals and store the
chemicals in their bodies for use in defense.
Monarch butterflies get their poison from milkweed plants,
on which monarch caterpillars feed. Many kinds of milkweed
make poison to defend themselves from plant-eating animals.
The poison causes heart failure, and most animals avoid it. It
does not, however, affect monarch caterpillars. As they grow,
they stock up milkweed poison in their bodies. The poison re-
mains after they turn into butterflies.
The foaming grasshoppers of Africa get their poison by
eating milkweed, too. Other insects obtain poison from other
plants. The garden tiger moth, for example, makes some of its
poison but gets the rest from plants it eats as a caterpillar, such as
poisonous foxgloves. Cinnabar moth caterpillars become poison-
ous by eating toxic ragwort plants. The caterpillar of the rattle-
box moth also eats poisonous plants. The adult rattlebox moth,
which has a warning coloration, is so distasteful that if it is caught
in a web, the spider cuts it free.
Some insects get their poison by eating other poisonous
insects. One kind of fire-colored beetle eats blister beetles and
stores the defensive chemicals in its body. Some of the chemi-
cals leak into a groove on its head. A female fire-colored beetle
will accept a male as a mate only if he has a good supply of these
Bad smells, Bad tastes, and powerful poisons 69
chemicals. He will give her some of the chemical, which she will
then pass on to her eggs. The chemical repels ants and other in-
sects that might eat the eggs.
Cochineal insects, which feed on cactuses in American des-
erts, also make a defensive chemical that is stolen by other insects.
This chemical, a red acid, repels ants and most other insects. But
some insects are not bothered by it. One kind of moth caterpillar
eats cochineal insects, and then when a predator bothers it, the
moth caterpillar throws up the acid along with its stomach con-
tents. Ants that get slimed with this substance give up their at-
tack. The larva of a species of ladybug also eats cochineal insects.
Its body uses the bug’s acid as part of the beetle’s reflex-bleeding
defense. The larvae of a fly species that eat cochineal insects ex-
crete the acid to repel predators.
Other animals can eat poisonous bugs without being harmed,
and then use the poison themselves. Poison dart frogs do not ac-
tually make their own poison; they get it from the insects they
eat. Their most likely source is a beetle. Poisonous pitohui birds
may eat relatives of this beetle.
A kind of Asian grass snake called the tiger keelback uses
poison taken from its prey for defense, too. The snake eats toads
that are poisonous. Its body stores the poison in glands on its
neck. When a predator threatens it, the snake does not flee. In-
stead, it tucks in its head to present the poison-filled glands. If
the predator bites, it will get a mouthful of poison.
A coati will use its front paws to roll up poisonous millipedes, an action
that gets rid of the defensive chemicals millipedes may release.
2 AnimAl deFenses
3
4 AnimAl deFenses
venomous stings
Packed inside an insect no bigger than a jellybean is a venom
strong enough to cause intense pain in humans—and occasion-
ally death, in people who are allergic to it. This venom belongs
to the honeybee.
A female honeybee has an abdomen tipped with a sting. The
bee’s vivid pattern of black and yellow stripes warns birds and
other predators that she is armed and dangerous.
Nearly all bees in a hive are females, which take care of a
queen bee that lays all the hive’s eggs. If their hive is threatened,
these worker bees use their stings to repel the intruder.
A honeybee’s stinger is attached to a pouch of venom in its
abdomen. The bee stings by jabbing its stinger into a predator’s
skin. Sawlike parts on the stinger dig their way into the flesh.
When the bee flies away, part of its abdomen is yanked off in the
process. The bee soon dies, but the venom-filled pouch remains
behind, pumping venom through the firmly embedded stinger
and into its victim.
The bee also gives off scent signals when it stings. These
scent signals are called pheromones. Other worker bees that
sense the pheromone become alarmed. They rush to the defense
of their hive and queen.
Honeybees do not use their venom to kill prey because they
feed on pollen and nectar made by flowers. Their venom is used
only for defense. Wasps and many ants, however, use their venom
for hunting as well as defending themselves.
Like bees, many wasps make loud buzzing sounds as they
fly, and many of them wear warning colors. Both the sounds and
the colors signal “danger” to birds, mammals, and many other
predators. Wasps sting to protect themselves. Species of wasps
that nest in groups also sting to defend their nests.
Unlike a bee’s sting, a wasp’s sting does not get stuck in a
predator’s flesh. A wasp can sting repeatedly, with each sting
venomous stings and Bites 5
causing great pain. The red velvet ant, a kind of wasp with black
and orange-red markings, is also known as a “cow killer.” That’s
because people say the pain from its sting is strong enough to kill
a cow.
Just as with bees, only female wasps have stings. This is be-
cause the sting evolved from a body part called an ovipositor,
which is used for laying eggs. A male wasp does not lay eggs, so
it lacks an ovipositor.
Predatory wasps use their venom to kill prey ranging
from tiny insects to spiders. This prey is chewed up and fed
to their larvae. Yellowjackets are predatory wasps. They have
bold stripes of black and yellow, white, or red, depending on
the species. Their prey includes insects such as grasshoppers
and caterpillars that harm crops. A few species of yellowjacket
are scavengers—animals that eat prey that has been killed by
other animals. These are the yellowjackets that are nuisances
at picnics.
Many kinds of ants also have stings for killing other insects.
Some species, such as army ants found in tropical forests of Cen-
tral and South America, feed only on other insects. Other spe-
cies use their venom mainly for defense. This venom can be ex-
tremely powerful. A group of army ants can kill a snake, though
they do not eat it.
Stinging ants first bite a predator so that they can hang on to
it with their jaws. Then they jab their stings into the predator’s
skin. Ants that do not have stings also grip skin with their jaws.
Then they spray the wound with a blast of venom from their
abdomens.
Another animal with a venomous sting is the scorpion. Scor-
pions are in a group of animals called arachnids. This group also
includes spiders and ticks. There are about 1,500 species of scor-
pions, and they are found nearly worldwide. These nocturnal
animals use venom for both hunting and defense.
6 AnimAl deFenses
stinging tentAcles
A group of ocean animals called cnidarians also use stings for
predation and self-defense. This group includes corals, jellyfish,
and anemones. Most are harmless to humans, or cause little more
than a rash. Some cnidarians, however, contain venom strong
enough to sicken or kill a human. The box jelly, also called a sea
wasp, is among the most deadly. It lives off the coast of Australia.
Its venom causes extreme pain, and a bad sting can kill a human
in less than five minutes.
Cnidarians’ stingers are called nematocysts. They are lo-
cated on the animals’ tentacles. Hundreds or even thousands of
nematocysts can be found on one tentacle, depending on the spe-
cies. A box jelly’s tentacle, which can be 9 feet (3 meters) long,
contains millions of nematocysts.
There are three kinds of nematocysts. One kind makes a
gluey substance that sticks to prey. A second kind shoots out
threads that loop around prey like coils of rope. The third kind
is venomous and works like a miniature harpoon. An animal may
have one or more kinds, depending on its species.
When an animal—either predator or prey—comes in con-
tact with a tentacle with venomous nematocysts, the nemato-
cysts launch their harpoons. Out shoots a tiny barb attached to
a twisted thread. The barb jabs the animal’s body. The thread
untwists, pushing the barb into the skin. Venom flows through
the thread and into the animal.
8 AnimAl deFenses
A sting from a sea wasp can kill a person in less than fi ve minutes.
venomous spines
Prickly hairs, spikes, quills, and spines on an animal’s body
help defend it. They can be irritating or painful, or difficult to
Venomous Stings and Bites 79
BORROWING VENOM
Some sea creatures, such as coral-eating parrotfish and
jellyfish-eating sea turtles, prey on cnidarians. Most
animals, of course, avoid them. Yet, a few animals have
found ways to use the cnidarians’ venom for their own
self-defense.
Anemonefish live safely among the tentacles of anem-
ones. The fishes’ scales are covered with a protective slime
that keeps the anemones from hurting them. Anemonefish
guard the anemones by chasing away other animals. Other
fish find safety by living among the tentacles of jellyfish.
Some kinds of sea slugs are also protected by slime—
but instead of living among an anemone’s tentacles, they
eat them. Instead of digesting the nematocysts, however,
the sea slug’s body stores them in frills or bumps along
its back. There, they work to protect the sea slug from
predators.
80 AnimAl deFenses
sharks. They hunt for clams, worms, and other prey on the sea-
bed in shallow water, and often half-bury themselves in sand and
mud when resting. Their tails are armed with sharp spines that
are notched along their edges like saw blades.
Stingrays use their spines to defend themselves from preda-
tors, such as sharks. A frightened stingray lashes its spiny tail
over its back to sting its foe. It also stings people who step on it.
Fireworms, some sea urchins, and the crown-of-thorns star-
fish also rely on sharp, venomous spines for protection. The fire-
worm is covered with hollow bristles that break off easily in a
predator’s skin and allow venom to seep into it. The burning pain
that results gives the fireworm its name. A fireworm warns that it
is dangerous by flaring its bristles.
A sea urchin is a prickly pincushion at all times. An ur-
chin’s spines pierce and break off in a predator’s skin. Venom-
ous long-spined sea urchins give predators a dose of venom as
well as an injury, because venom flows from the broken spines.
Some species’ spines are covered with venomous skin, which
leaks venom when the spine stabs an animal. The crown-of-
thorns starfish, a relative of urchins, also delivers its venom in
this way.
An urchin, which can sense light and dark, can pinpoint its
attacker and then aim its spines in that direction. The most ven-
omous urchin, called the flower urchin, has nonvenomous spines.
However, it has miniature sets of venomous jaws hidden among
its spines.
Other species have venomous spines in their fins. Like sting-
rays, these fish use their spines only for defense. The weeverfish,
found along British beaches, hunts by lying hidden in the sand
in shallow water. It has venomous spines in its back fin and over
its gills. It doesn’t use these on the shrimp and small fish that it
snaps up as they swim by, but a fish that tries to eat the weever-
fish will be confronted by these weapons.
82 AnimAl deFenses
the spines and into the injury caused by the pointy tips. Stone-
fish live in parts of the Indian and western Pacific oceans. Their
venom is the deadliest of any fish. People get stung when they
accidentally step on a stonefish. Sharks and rays get stung when
they close their jaws on one.
Not all venomous fish are sluggish, bottom-dwelling species.
The gaudy lionfish, with its bright colors and large fins, is a vivid
sight as it swims among other coral reef fish. Its beautiful fins,
however, contain venomous spines. A lionfish uses them to de-
fend itself and will turn to face a predator, spreading out its spiny
fins in warning.
Worldwide, there are about 1,200 kinds of venomous fish—
more than twice the number of venomous snake species.
venomous Bites
Venomous snakes inject their venom by biting, as do spiders, cen-
tipedes, octopuses, and a few lizards and mammals. All of these
animals use their venom to paralyze or kill their prey, as well as
to defend against predators.
There are about 500 species of venomous snakes worldwide.
Only a few are deadly to humans. Among them are cobras, which
are found in parts of Africa and Asia.
Cobras prey on rodents, birds, frogs, lizards, snakes, and
other small animals. A cobra kills prey with venom produced in
glands at the back of its jaws, near its eyes. The venom flows
down grooves in the fangs at the front of its mouth.
The biggest cobra, the king cobra, is also the world’s largest
venomous snake. The largest king cobra ever measured was 18 feet
(5.6 m) long. However, the king cobra, like other venomous snakes,
is not eager to use its venom in self-defense. It is more likely to flee
or hide, even though its venom is strong enough to kill an elephant
with just one bite. If a predator approaches the cobra or its nest,
the cobra raises the front of its body off the ground and hisses.
It also spreads the ribs of its neck, creating a hood out around its
head. If these warnings are ignored, the snake strikes.
Some cobras spray venom at predators instead of biting them.
These “spitting cobras” have openings midway down their front
fangs. The snake squeezes venom through these openings. The
spray can hit a target up to 10 feet (3 m) away. It usually ends up
in the predator’s eyes, causing terrible pain and blindness. Some-
times, the blindness is permanent.
Rattlesnakes, like cobras, deliver their venom with fangs.
However, a rattlesnake’s fangs are not fi xed in place like a cobra’s.
Instead, they are hinged. They fold back in the rattlesnake’s
mouth when it is closed. When the snake opens its mouth to
strike, the fangs spring out, ready for action.
venomous stings and Bites 85
VENOMOUS MAMMALS
the use of venom is common among insects, snakes, and
other animal families. no birds are known to be venomous,
and there are only a few species of venomous mammals.
venomous bites are found in a few species of small
mammals called shrews. they use their venomous saliva to
paralyze or kill prey, such as mice, fish, frogs, and newts.
they also will bite in self-defense, leaving their attacker
with pain and swelling. Another mammal with venomous
saliva for killing prey is the solenodon. this animal looks
like a shrew. it lives only on the islands of cuba and his-
paniola in the west indies.
the platypus of Australia is also venomous. this duck-
billed, beaver-tailed mammal has no teeth, but the male
platypus has venomous spurs on its hind legs. they are
used for defense and for fighting with other males. the
venom is said to be strong enough to kill a dog.
the slow loris, a chubby, big-eyed animal of south-
east Asia, also uses venom to protect itself. A loris’s ven-
om gland is in its arm. to use the venom, the loris licks
its arm. then, when it bites, the mixture of saliva and
venom seeps out from between its teeth into the wound.
the smell of the venomous saliva repels predators, such
as bears. this may be why a female loris spreads saliva
on her young when she needs to leave them untended
for a while.
Venomous Stings and Bites 89
bumblebee nests, risking stings as they dig up and eat bee lar-
vae and stored food. Bears raid the nests of honeybees as well
as bumblebees. Bees visiting flowers may be snared by crab spi-
ders lying in wait for them among the blossoms. Some kinds of
wasps specialize in hunting bees to feed to their young.
A variety of birds also feed on bees, taking care to remove
the sting or venom first. Bee-eaters, found in Europe, Africa,
Asia, and Australia, catch bees in midair with their long beaks. A
bee-eater that catches a bee perches in a tree, where it rubs and
bashes its prey against a branch until the venom and sting are
squeezed out. Then the bee-eater safely eats its meal.
South American birds called motmots use this method, too.
In North America, birds called northern shrikes can eat bees and
wasps. A shrike rubs the insect on a branch or jams it onto a
thorn and pulls out the sting with its beak.
Long-billed birds of Africa and Asia called hornbills eat
venomous snakes, centipedes, and scorpions. A hornbill will
grasp the prey with the tip of its beak and then squeeze the prey
from one end to the other. By the time the birds are through,
all the venom glands have been squashed and the stingers
destroyed.
Baboons and other African monkeys eat scorpions. They re-
move the scorpion’s tail, then eat the rest of the body. African
mammals called meerkats teach their pups how to bite off scor-
pions’ stingers.
Even venomous snakes get eaten. The long-legged secre-
tary bird of Africa will kick a snake and stomp on it to kill it.
Mongooses, which are in the same family as meerkats, kill and
eat deadly cobras. With strong jaws, a mongoose quickly grabs a
snake behind its head. Mongooses also dine on other venomous
animals, such as spiders, scorpions, and centipedes.
Mongooses are partly resistant to the venom of snakes.
Opossums, European hedgehogs, and some rodents also are
90 AnimAl deFenses
91
92 AnimAl deFenses
that a predator could eat. At the same time, it warns the predator
not to attack.
The study of mimicry dates back to the mid-1800s. Scien-
tists found two kinds of mimicry among animals. First, some
harmless animals mimic harmful ones. This kind of mimicry be-
came known as Batesian mimicry. Second, some harmful ani-
mals mimic other harmful species. This kind of mimicry became
known as Müllerian mimicry.
mimicry 93
Bee and wasp mimics also exist among some kinds of moths
that are active during the day. The hornet moth, for example,
looks like a kind of wasp called a hornet. The yellow-banded
sphinx and the bumblebee moth both mimic bees.
Ants are commonly mimicked, too. They are included with
wasps and bees in a large group called the order Hymenoptera.
Many ants bite or sting and contain an irritating, distasteful fluid
called formic acid. These defenses cause many insects and other
predators to avoid ants—and other animals to mimic them.
Some species of jumping spiders have two-part bodies that
look more like the three-part bodies of ants. They also hold up
their front legs so that they look like waving antennae. This leaves
They may look like ants, but jumping spiders are actually mimicking
them. Here, two ants flank a jumping spider.
96 AnimAl deFenses
them with six legs for running and darting in an antlike manner.
Species of beetles, flies, plant-sucking bugs, and the young of
various insects also mimic ants.
Lycid beetles are also often mimicked. There are about
3,000 species of this beetle worldwide. Most smell bad, taste bad,
and wear warning colors of orange and black. Birds avoid eating
them. Batesian mimics of lycid beetles include some species of
flies, the South American cockroach, and even other beetles.
Another beetle model is the tiger beetle, which bites with
strong jaws. Among its mimics are the harmless young of the
Malaysian katydid, a relative of the grasshopper and cricket.
Some species of grasshoppers imitate tiger beetles, too.
Other grasshoppers mimic bombardier beetles, which can
spray attackers with a jet of boiling hot fluid. Harmless cock-
roaches mimic ladybugs. One species of cockroach has wings
that curl up so that it looks short and round, like a ladybug.
Butterflies, the insects that originally inspired the study
of mimicry, still fascinate scientists with their complex mimic-
and-model relationships. The pipevine swallowtail is a beauti-
ful blue-and-black butterfly with yellow, orange, and white spots
sprinkled on the edges and undersides of its wings. It is found in
the eastern United States and parts of Mexico. Pipevine swal-
lowtail caterpillars feed on poisonous pipevine plants, storing the
poison. The adult butterflies taste bad and are poisonous. A bird
that eats a pipevine swallowtail gets sick. The bird remembers
the butterfly’s warning colors and avoids it in future. Such birds
also avoid the pipevine swallowtail’s otherwise-tasty mimics:
female spicebush swallowtails, red-spotted purples, and female
Diana fritillaries.
Another model for Batesian mimics is the common crow
butterfly, a black, brown, and white bad-tasting butterfly found
in Asia. The confused clearwing, a butterfly of South America,
mimicry 9
another, they are black, yellow, and white. In another area, they
are white and black. There are more than a dozen color combina-
tions in this species.
be that the mildly venomous false coral snakes are the models. A
bite from such a snake would hurt a predator, but not kill it. The
predator would learn to avoid such snakes in the future. These
would create a population of “educated” predators that have
learned to avoid red, yellow, and black snakes.
A bite from a deadly coral snake, however, would kill the pred-
ator. This would mean that the coral snake could never “educate”
predators to leave it alone. Thus, the deadly snake may mimic the
less deadly one—it benefits from having the less deadly snake edu-
cate the predators. The non-venomous mimics benefit, too.
MIMICRY IN MAMMALS
mimicry is not widely found in birds or mammals. yet,
there are a few examples.
the African porcupine may be a model for a large Afri-
can rodent called the maned rat. the porcupine has sharp,
black-and-white quills that are easily seen as it moves
about at night. its mimic, the maned rat, is also most ac-
tive at night. it lacks quills, but has a mane of black fur on
its back that it can raise so that it looks like a porcupine.
the rat also may be mimicking another African animal,
a weasel-like creature called the zorilla. like the rat, the
zorilla is nocturnal. it is also black and white and raises its
fur when threatened. the zorilla can spray terrible-smell-
ing fluid, just like a skunk. the rat cannot spray, but when
it stiffens its mane, it exposes patches of skin bordered
with white. glands in the skin release a strong, foul smell.
Few predators tackle either the zorilla or the rat.
people who live in the maned rat’s range believe that
the rat’s glands also produce poison. scientists don’t yet
know if this is true. if it is, the rat would be considered a
müllerian mimic—a harmful animal that resembles other
harmful animals.
mimicry 101
mÜlleriAn mimics
Some of the insects that mimic bad-smelling, inedible lycid bee-
tles are harmless Batesian mimics. However, lycid beetles also
have mimics that are just as sickening to predators. These mimics
include bad-tasting beetles and moths as well as stinging wasps.
They are all Müllerian mimics—harmful animals that mimic other
harmful animals. Müllerian mimics are also called “co-mimics.”
It may seem strange for an animal that has defenses of its
own to mimic another animal. A stinging wasp and a nauseating
moth, both with warning colors, can easily educate predators to
leave them alone without mimicking a nasty beetle. This kind
of mimicry, however, may have developed because it benefits the
models as well as the mimics. They share the task of educating
predators, and they also share the danger of being caught by a
predator that has not yet learned to leave them alone.
The colorful Heliconius butterflies of tropical Central
and South America are among the best examples of Müllerian
mimicry at work. There are more than 40 species of Heliconius
butterflies. As caterpillars, they feed on the vines of poisonous
passion plants. Their bodies become poisonous. Later, they grow
to be poisonous butterflies with black, red-orange, and yellow-
ish wings. The butterflies also give off strong smells, which may
help warn predators that rely on smell more than sight. Heliconius
butterflies of different species resemble each other, so predators
that learn to avoid one species will then avoid similar-looking
butterflies of other species. The butterflies employ Müllerian
mimicry across the range of places in which they live. Butterflies
of one Heliconius species in a particular place may look different
from butterflies of the same species in another place, but their
co-mimics look different in each place, too.
Heliconius butterflies, in turn, are mimicked by butterflies
that are not related to them. Some of these butterflies may also
102 AnimAl deFenses
be poisonous, but others are not. Some are not butterflies at all,
but day-flying moths.
The links among these insects are so complex that scientists
put them in groups based on colors, not by kinds: “tiger,” “red,”
“blue,” “orange,” and “transparent.” These groups are called mim-
icry rings.
Species of poisonous burnet moths also wear warning col-
ors in different patterns of red, black, yellow, and white. These
day-flying moths are found in much of Europe, Africa, and Asia.
Their bodies make a strong acid that’s carried in their blood.
Species of burnet moths living in the same area look similar to
mimicry 103
CATERPILLARS
THAT MIMIC SNAKES
From a predator’s point of view, caterpillars are packaged
meals—soft-bodied, protein-packed morsels. Ants, birds,
monkeys, and other animals feed on them. caterpillars
have evolved a wide array of defenses to repel them. snake
mimicry is one of these defenses.
many caterpillars, moths, and butterflies have patch-
es of bright color shaped like eyes that can be flashed
at a predator. the sudden appearance of eyespots can
startle a bird or a similar predator long enough to delay
its attack and give the insect time to escape. eyespots
also help some caterpillars pull off a convincing imitation
of a snake.
the caterpillar of an elephant hawk-moth, for exam-
ple, has a scaly pattern on its body and big eyespots near
its head. when it is threatened, it tucks in its head, which
makes its eyespots bulge. suddenly, the caterpillar appears
to be a watchful snake.
Another hawk-moth caterpillar found in south America
mimics a tree-dwelling viper. it turns into a snake by relax-
ing its grip on a branch and raising its front end. then it
puffs up its body just behind its head and turns sideways.
(continues)
104 AnimAl deFenses
(continued)
10
108 AnimAl deFenses
but also leans back on its tail to kick with its hind legs. Then it
slashes downward with the sharp claws on its big hind feet.
Birds, such as chickens, will claw and peck as they struggle
to escape. A large bird can also kick at its foe. An ostrich, for ex-
ample, kicks forward at its attacker. Then it slashes downward to
rake it with its sharp claws, which measure up to 4 inches (10 cm)
long. An ostrich’s kick is powerful enough to kill a lion.
Hoofed animals also kick to ward off attackers. A giraffe can
kill its only predator, the lion, with a single kick. A zebra kicks
out with its hind legs at a predator chasing it and can break its jaw
or neck. Deer kick at coyotes with their front hooves.
Many animals lack claws or hooves, but can use other ap-
pendages to defend themselves. A lobster has large claws called
pincers that it uses to catch and crush crabs, clams, and other
prey. It also uses them to defend itself. A lobster’s pinching power
is strong enough to break a person’s finger joint. Crabs can pinch
hard enough to draw blood. Insects that cannot sting will often
bite—sometimes painfully.
Although antlers may seem like a good weapon, a deer typically uses
its antlers more for interacting with other deer than for fighting off
predators.
Fighting Back 113
group deFense
Many animals find safety in numbers by living in large groups.
Bison live in herds. Tuna and many other fish species form large
schools. Geese and other birds form flocks as they migrate from
one place to another when the seasons change. Aphids cluster
together on stems.
114 AnimAl deFenses
Scientists have seen other animals, such as gnus and white rhi-
nos, form defensive circles.
Zebras do not form circles, but small herds do work together
to foil predators. If a pack of hyenas creeps up on a herd, a male
zebra charges at them, ready to bite and kick. The females and
young gather together and move away. Often a female known
as the lead mare guides them. Wild horses also behave in this
way. Other animals, such as elephants and cattle, approach and
threaten predators that come near their herds.
Large African monkeys called baboons also live in groups.
They sometimes work together to drive off predators. Scientists
have seen males of one species of baboon ganging up on leopards
and dogs to chase them away. A smaller monkey, the red colo-
bus, also teams up with other males to defend their group when
chimpanzees attack. The male monkeys get between the females
and their young and the chimps. They leap onto the chimps and
bite them.
Many species of small, burrowing mammals cooperate
against predators, too. These animals alert each other to danger.
Meerkats are weasel-like animals that live in dry lands of south-
ern Africa. When they leave their burrows to look for food, a
few animals stand guard. The guards climb onto a rock or
a termite mound and stand on their hind legs. They scan
the skies for eagles and hawks. They also keep an eye out for hungry
jackals. If a predator appears, the guards call quickly and sharply.
This is the signal for everybody to dive into the burrows.
North American prairie dogs, which are related to squir-
rels, also live in burrows. The burrows cover a huge area of land
known as a prairie-dog town. Prairie dogs do not post guards.
Yet, because there are so many prairie dogs, someone in the town
is likely to spot a hawk or a coyote. Prairie dogs that spot danger
will give a danger call. At this signal, everybody scurries under-
ground to safety.
116 AnimAl deFenses
This meerkat in the Kalahari Desert of South Africa stands guard atop a
rock, ready to call out a warning if predators approach.
AlArm signAls
Meerkats and prairie dogs are just two of the many animals that
give alarm calls when they see predators. Scientists have found
that many kinds of animals give alarm calls. These animals often
give different calls for different predators. The animals that hear
the alarms behave in different ways for each call.
Florida scrub jays take turns being on guard duty while the
rest of the family group feeds. When a scrub jay sees a predator,
Fighting Back 11
MOBBING BY BIRDS
many species of birds will gang up on a predator and
bother it when it is not hunting. this behavior is called
mobbing.
crows will gather around an eagle perched in a tree
and caw at it. they will even fly close to it and strike it in
passing. their caws attract more crows that will join in the
attack. the crows mob the eagle until it flies away. small
birds mob predators, too. A mob may be made up of birds
of several species.
scientists who study birds have long wondered why
birds would risk their lives to mob a hawk, cat, fox, or oth-
er predator, especially one that is not hunting. they have
come up with several reasons.
the mobbing birds may be letting the predator know
that it has been seen, so it might as well go hunt some-
where else. they may be parent birds trying to distract the
predator so that it will not look for their nests. they may be
trying to get the attention of a bigger predator—one that
will go after the birds’ predator. mobbing also helps other
birds know that there is a predator in the neighborhood.
118 AnimAl deFenses
One Florida scrub jay will look for predators while the family group eats.
If it spots danger, it calls out an alarm warning so the others can flee.
alert other insects, which come to help defend the nest. An insect
called a lace bug protects her eggs and young by fluttering her
wings at beetles. If her defense fails and a larva is grabbed, she
produces a pheromone that warns the other larvae to flee. Like-
wise, an aphid attacked by a predator makes a fluid that not only
clogs up the predator’s mouth, but also contains a pheromone
that causes other aphids to dash away.
Underwater animals use pheromones as alarm signals, too. A
sea anemone that is nibbled by a fish gives off a pheromone that
makes nearby anemones close up. Many fish, such as minnows,
release pheromones when a predator injures them. Fish that pick
up the scent will hide or swim away.
ongoing AdAptAtions
Today, animals continue to adapt to their environment and to the
other living things that share their habitat. Prey animals evolve
behaviors and traits that help defend them against predators,
while predators evolve to get around their prey’s defenses. This
back-and-forth between predator and prey is often referred to as
a “biological arms race.”
122 AnimAl deFenses
124
glossary 125
126
Bibliography 12
128
Further resources 129
weB sites
National Geographic Society
http://kids.nationalgeographic.com/Animals/CreatureFeature/
The National Geographic Society’s site offers in-depth profiles of
animal species, including videos.
PBS’s Nature
http://www.pbs.org/wnet/nature/critter.html
The Public Broadcasting Service’s site based on the television pro-
gram Nature; provides profiles of animals as well as activities and
videos.
130
Index
A bark bugs, 18 boxfish, 52, 62
abalone, 54 basilisk lizards, 24 box jellies, 77
adaptations, 21, 121–123 Bates, Henry, 93 box turtles, 46
African flower mantis, Batesian mimicry, 92, 93, bristles, 40
16, 27 94–100, 105 bull snakes, 99
alarm signals, 116–120 bats, 26 bumblebees, 88–89, 91
albatrosses, 68–69 beach hoppers, 24 burnet moths, 102–103
alligators, 52 bearded vultures, 52–54 burrowing, 11–12, 13
anemone crabs, 20 bee-eaters, 89 bushveld lizards, 99
anemonefish, 79 bee-fly family, 94 butterflies, 27, 29, 31–
anemones, 77, 78, 79, bees, 73–74, 88–89, 32, 56, 60, 68, 93–94,
98, 120 94–95, 119–121 96–98, 101–102,
angelfish, 31 beetles, 27, 35, 58, 105–106
angwantibos, 72 66–67, 70, 94, 96 butterfly fish, 30
ankylosaurus, 38 biological arms race,
anoles, 33 121–123 C
anteaters, 44–45 bison, 113 cactus longhorn beetles,
antelopes, 13, 23, 25 bites, venoms and, 84–87 105
antivenins, 76 bitterns, 18 camouflage, 14–20
antlers, 111–113 bivalves, 48 camouflaged loopers,
ants, 39, 56, 64–66, 75, black mambas, 85 20–21
95, 120–121 black widows, 87 carpenter ants, 66
aposematism, 64 blending, 9 carrion beetles, 66
apple snails, 54 blister beetles, 58, 68–69 caterpillars, 10, 15–21,
arachnids, 75 blood, 43, 60, 76 25, 27, 35, 39–40,
armadillo lizards, 43 blue-capped ifrita, 61 60, 63–64, 69, 79–80,
armadillos, 49–51, 53 blue jays, 70–72 103–105
armor, 38–54 blue-tongued skinks, 30 centipedes, 32, 34, 86
army ants, 75 bluffing, 29 chameleons, 35
bobcats, 54 chameleon snakes, 85
B bolt holes, 13 cheetahs, 7–9
baboons, 89, 115 bombardier beetles, chemicals, 55–56. See also
ball pythons, 53 66–67, 96 poisons; venoms
131
132 AnimAl deFenses
136