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Animal Behavior

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Animal

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

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in


any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying,
recording, or by any information storage or retrieval systems, without
permission in writing from the publisher. For information, contact:

Chelsea House
An imprint of Infobase Publishing
132 West 31st Street
New York NY 10001

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

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

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Text design by Kerry Casey


Cover design by Ben Peterson
Printed in the United States
Bang EJB 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
This book is printed on acid-free paper.

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.

Caption: A thorny devil, native to Australia, is camouflaged in shades of


desert browns and tans. The spikes on its body also help protect it from
predators.
Contents
1 Avoiding Danger 7
2 Escape Artists 22
3 Animal Armor 38
4 Bad Smells, Bad Tastes,
and Powerful Poisons 55
5 Venomous Stings and Bites 73
6 Mimicry 91
 Fighting Back 107

Glossary 124
Bibliography 126
Further Resources 128
Picture Credits 130
Index 131
About the Author 136
1
Avoiding Danger

A cheetAh skulks through the tall grass of the African sa-


vannah. Head lowered, she stares intently at a herd of gazelles.
Her spotted coat blends in with the dry grass, making her nearly
invisible as she sneaks up on her prey.
The gazelles continue to graze. Between bites of grass, each
one snaps up its head to check out its surroundings. Bright eyes
scan the horizon. Ears swivel to pick up the slightest sound. Nos-
trils flare to sniff for the scent of a cheetah, lion, or other hungry
predator.
Suddenly, a few gazelles snort and stamp their feet. The
entire herd goes on high alert. The black bands that run down
the gazelles’ sides quiver, passing along the message: “Danger!”
Then, some of the gazelles begin bouncing as if on pogo sticks.
They spring high in the air with their backs arched and legs stiff.
They land on all fours, and then leap again.
The cheetah pauses. The gazelles have seen her. It is impos-
sible to launch a surprise attack now. The cheetah depends on one
short-lived, startling burst of speed to chase down a gazelle. The
gazelles, however, also run fast, hitting speeds of up to 40 miles
(64 km) an hour—and they can keep up this speed much longer


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.

than a cheetah can. Their odd jumping behavior, called stotting,


signals to the cheetah, “We have seen you, so do not bother to
chase us—we are strong and healthy and can outrun you.”
If the cheetah is lucky, perhaps she will find a gazelle fawn
hidden in the grass. However, the fawns have tawny coats and
can lie still as a stone for a long time. Plus, the fawns’ mothers are
Avoiding danger 9

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

HIDING BY DAY OR NIGHT


many species make use of hideaways only when they are
inactive. raccoons, for example, are largely nocturnal—
they are most active at night. during most daylight hours,
they are curled up in a tree cavity, a woodpile, or even an
attic, fast asleep. At night, they emerge to look for food.
their meals often include other nocturnal animals, such as
slugs or mice.
As a result of being nocturnal, an animal not only
avoids predators that are active by day, but also avoids
competing with animals that eat the same food. two dif-
ferent species that both feed on insects, for example, can
use the same resource without competing directly if one is
part of the day crew and the other takes the night shift.
of course, some predators also are active at night. A
nocturnal moth, for example, may be caught by a bat. the
bat, in turn, may be caught by an owl.

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.

Ground squirrels, like this marmot, create dwellings under-


ground in part to hide quickly from predators.
14 AnimAl deFenses

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.

hiding in plAin sight


Camouflage, also known as cryptic coloration, is the one-size-
fits-all defense in the world of animals. Animals as small as in-
sects and as large as the boldly patterned giraffe—towering at a
height of 18 feet (6 m)—depend on their cryptic colorations to
help them blend in.
Colors and patterns may camouflage an animal not only by
helping it blend in, but also by breaking up its shape. That way,
a predator does not recognize it at first. An animal’s coloring can
Avoiding danger 15

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

resembles a leaf just needs to sit on a leafy twig to blend in and


look like a leaf.
Some animals go one step further and behave in ways that
enhance their camouflage.
Walkingsticks are part of this cast of animal actors. These
long, thin insects naturally resemble twigs, complete with sharp-
ly bent limbs and bumpy joints. They are closely related to the
fantastically shaped leaf insects, which have body parts shaped
and colored to look like leaves—right down to leaf veins, nibbled
edges, and brown spots of decay. But walkingsticks don’t just
look like sticks, and leaf insects don’t just look like leaves. They
act like them, too. While sitting still they sway slowly, mimick-
ing the motion of a twig or leaf in the breeze.
Leaf insects have been known to dangle from a stem by one
leg, as if they were leaves about to drop. If threatened, many leaf
insects will fall to the ground, landing on their feet and scuttling
away.
Other insects imitate plant galls, seeds, and flowers. The Af-
rican flower mantis takes on the coloring of the flower on which
it lives. This is also true of the Malaysian orchid mantis, which
has legs that look like flower petals. The camouflage patterns on
many moths’ wings imitate patterns of tree bark and the lichen
growing on it.
Moths instinctively use this camouflage to their advantage.
The pine hawk-moth perches on a tree with its head pointing
up. This lines up the stripes on its wings with the bark’s fur-
rows. The waved umber moth perches sideways on trees. That’s
because its stripes run across its wings. The sideways perch lines
up these stripes with the bark’s pattern.
Among the insects, caterpillars excel at combining cryptic
coloration with deceptive behavior. A caterpillar’s job is to eat
and grow while avoiding being eaten by birds. A caterpillar must
also avoid tiny wasps eager to lay their eggs on it. The eggs hatch
into larvae that feed on the caterpillar.
Avoiding danger 1

A Costa Rican rainforest species of moth caterpillar called


Navarcostes limnatis looks like a diseased leaf covered with fun-
gus. It adds a rocking motion to this disguise so that it appears
to be quivering in a breeze. Another caterpillar, the larva of a
butterfly called the meander leafwing, crawls to the tip of a leaf
after hatching. It eats the parts of the leaf that stick out on either
side of the sturdy rib running down the leaf’s middle. Then it
sits on the rib so that it looks like a bit of nibbled leaf itself. The
caterpillar will continue to eat the leaf over the next few days. It
binds scraps of leaf to the rib with silk secreted by its body and
hides among them.
Insects are stars when it comes to combining camouflage
with a convincing performance, but other animals also use this
tactic. The leafy sea dragon of Australian waters is one example.
It has frills that make it look like a bit of drifting seaweed. The
sea dragon also rocks slowly and rhythmically, mirroring the
swaying of seaweed in its habitat.
Half a world away, the leaf fish of South America’s Amazon
River floats slowly on its side, its flattened, brown body resem-
bling a dead leaf drifting in the water. Its snout looks like the
leaf’s stalk. This behavior allows the fish to avoid predators and
hunt its own prey without being noticed.
Many tree frogs also imitate leaves or other plant parts.
The red-eyed tree frog, for example, snuggles into the curve of
a leaf during the day. Its bright green body blends with the leaf.
The frog tucks its legs and big orange feet close to its blue-
and-yellow sides so that the vivid colors are hidden. Finally,
it closes its bulging red eyes, hiding them under gold-flecked
lids. The frog can see through these lids to watch for danger
as it naps.
Even some larger animals manage to pull off the trick of
resembling an object. The potoo, a nocturnal bird of Central
and South America, spends the day perched on a dead branch.
Its feathers, mottled with brown and gray, work as camouflage.
18 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

mAsking: AnimAls in disguise


Some species push the defense tactics of hiding and camouflage
to the max by actually wearing costumes. This behavior is known
as masking.
The decorator crab, found in the eastern Pacific Ocean, is
named for its habit of disguising itself. The crab picks seaweed,
anemones, and sponges and puts them on its shell. Bristles on
the shell work like Velcro to hold these items in place. In this dis-
guise, the crab looks like another weed-covered rock. When the
crab outgrows its shell and sheds it during molting, it takes the
decorations off its old shell and plants them on its new one.
Decorator crabs share the eastern Pacific with sharp-nosed
crabs, which sometimes stick seaweed on the sharp front edges of
their shells. Other species of crab disguise themselves, too. The
camouflage crab of New Zealand adorns its shell and legs with
seaweed (and sometimes snacks on bits of it). The sponge crab
uses its hind legs to hold a live sponge on its shell. The shell is
covered with algae, which has settled on the shell just as it would
on a stone.
Hermit crabs sometimes plant anemones on their shells.
Anemones have stinging cells in their tentacles, so they provide
an extra layer of protection for the crab. In return, the crab takes
them to new feeding grounds, and the anemones can dine on
tidbits from the crab’s meals. Another species, the anemone crab,
has claws equipped with hooks for gripping anemones. Any pred-
ator that approaches this crab will have the stinging anemones
waved in its face.
Some insects also use masking. A wavy-lined emerald cater-
pillar cuts petals from the flowers it feeds on. Then it attaches the
petals to spines on its body and fastens them in place with silk.
When the petals wilt, it replaces them. This habit has earned the
caterpillar the alternative name of camouflaged looper. Other
Avoiding danger 21

kinds of looper caterpillars mask themselves with flowers, leaves,


and bits of bark.
The larvae of many kinds of caddis fly mask themselves in
camouflaged cases. The cases are made out of material from the
larva’s freshwater habitat: grains of sand, small stones and shells,
leaves, twigs, bits of wood, or pine needles. The materials are
bound together with sticky or silky fluids produced by the larva’s
body. A hooked pair of legs at the larva’s hind end hang on to the
case as the larva creeps about in search of food.
Hiding, camouflage, and masking help animals avoid preda-
tors. Animals’ behaviors and bodies have changed over millions
of years in ways that help them survive. Scientists call these
changes adaptations. The process of change over time is called
evolution.
Predators have also evolved so that they could keep find-
ing prey. When they do, the prey must turn to another form of
self-defense.
2
Escape Artists

hiding, stAnding still, and camouflage help many ani-


mals avoid predators, but these defenses do not work all the time.
Predators may find hiding places, stumble over prey lying stock-
still, or discover that a leaf is actually an insect in disguise. Prey
animals need a second line of defense.
For many animals, this defense is escape. Escape often means
fleeing as quickly as possible. Escape also may involve behaviors
that buy an animal a few extra seconds to get away. This could be
startling a predator or distracting it. Some animals go so far as
to actually lose body parts to aid in their escape. A few appear to
give up by playing dead.

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

Deer race away just as quickly. The pronghorn of western North


American grasslands can run about 50 miles (80 km) per hour.
This burst of speed may enable an animal to leave its pur-
suer in the dust. If the predator persists, however, many hoofed
animals can run fast for several miles. A pronghorn can run at 35
miles (56 km) per hour for about 4 miles (6 km).
Running works well for speedy four-legged animals. It also
serves some two-legged ones. The ostrich, the world’s largest
bird at 8 feet tall (2.4 m), cannot fly. Other than lions and jack-
als, few animals prey on it. If pursued, an ostrich can outrun and
outlast most predators. It can cruise at speeds up to 40 miles (64
km) an hour and run at a slightly slower speed for 20 minutes or

When fleeing a predator, the basilisk lizard musters up enough energy to


be able to run on water.
24 AnimAl deFenses

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

Some animals roll away from danger. Wheel spiders, which


live in Africa’s Namib Desert, start their escape from predatory
wasps by running. Then, they suddenly fold their legs and flip
sideways to roll down sand dunes like wheels. They can roll at
a speed of about 3 feet (1 m) per second. The caterpillar of the
mother-of-pearl moth also goes for a spin to escape by curling
into a circle and then pushing off. A species of mantis shrimp,
found along some Pacific shores, rolls up and pushes itself along
in a series of backward somersaults.
Many predators, however, also have speed on their side.
Their prey must often use other tactics besides pure speed to
make their escape.
One way to make a pursuer work harder is to zigzag. A rabbit
running from a coyote, for example, does not run endlessly in a
straight line. Instead, it dodges back and forth, forcing the coy-
ote to change direction and make sharp turns, too. Zigzagging
is easier for a rabbit, which is small, than for the larger coyote.
The coyote also cannot tell when the rabbit will dodge this way
or that, so it cannot plan its next move. In this way, the rabbit
makes the chase more difficult and tiring for the coyote. Though
a coyote may still succeed in catching its prey, there is a chance
that it may tire out, give up, and go look for an easier meal.
Other animals also dart and dash when chased. A herd of im-
pala, slender antelopes of African grasslands, not only run from
a predator but also zigzag in all directions. Impala also leap over
each other as they run, sometimes springing as high as 10 feet (3
m) into the air. This explosion of activity startles and confuses a
predator. It also makes it difficult for a predator to chase any one
animal.
Zigzagging mixed with freezing can confuse predators, too.
Frogs and grasshoppers will jump in one direction, then freeze,
only to pop off in another direction if the predator comes near.
A predator may not be able to focus on its prey with all the
26 AnimAl deFenses

unexpected starts and stops. Likewise, a cottontail rabbit may


go from zigzagging to freezing as it flees. When it runs, it flash-
es its puffy white tail like a target. When it freezes, it sits on its
tail. The predator may lose track of the rabbit because the tail
has vanished.

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

enough to make a predator flinch or pause for a fraction of a sec-


ond. That little bit of extra time can let an animal escape with
its life.
A variety of animals even sport special colors or body parts
to help them startle predators. These colors and parts are used in
behaviors called startle displays. A startle display may be used
to fend off an attack right from the start. Many startle displays of
this type involve suddenly flashing a vivid color or pattern.
This is the tactic used by the io moth, which lives in North
America. At rest, an io moth is pale yellow or brown. But if a bird
attempts to grab it, the io moth quickly moves its forewings. This
reveals two hind wings boldly colored with a pair of big black
spots surrounded by a circle of yellow. These spots look like eyes,
and are called eyespots. To a bird, the display of eyespots may
look like the sudden appearance of a larger bird, such as an owl—
its own predator. The startled bird may fly away rather than risk
its life, or it may pause long enough for the moth to escape.
Eyespots are found on the wings of hundreds of species of
moths and butterflies. They are also seen on many caterpillars.
A swallowtail butterfly’s plump green body has two huge yel-
low eyespots on its humped front end. This makes it look like a
snake. When threatened, the vine hawk moth’s brown caterpil-
lar curls into a “C” and bulges its yellow eyespots. A Malaysian
hawk moth caterpillar puffs up its front end when threatened.
This makes its eyespots open wide. It also snaps its head back and
forth as if it were a snake about to strike.
Other insects flash startling eyespots, too. The African
flower mantis, which usually blends in with the shapes and colors
of its flowery habitat, flares out wings with eyespots when it is
threatened. The eyed click beetle has two black eyespots behind
its head. An Australian moth caterpillar has eyespots that are
normally hidden in the folds of its body. When it flexes its hind
end, the folds open like lids to reveal the “eyes.”
28 AnimAl deFenses

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.

its intended meal suddenly turn black or zebra-striped is often


scared away.
Many kinds of stick insects, grasshoppers, butterflies, moths,
and other insects also flash bright colors when fleeing a predator.
The colors disappear when they leap or fly to a new spot and fold
their wings. They then blend in with their surroundings as they
sit perfectly still.
Sometimes just a spot of color can do the trick. The shin-
gleback skink of Australia is a stumpy, short-legged lizard. Its
earth-tone colors usually hide it. However, the skink startles
potential predators by suddenly opening its mouth and sticking
out its thick, blue tongue. It also huffs and puffs, hissing like a
30 AnimAl deFenses

snake. Another Australian lizard that uses this startle display is


the blue-tongued skink, named for its turquoise tongue.
An Australian legless lizard called the excitable delma does
not have startling colors, but it still spooks predators with its
behavior. If bothered, this animal twists and turns its body vio-
lently as it slithers away. This odd behavior may startle and con-
fuse a predator.

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.

Juvenile emperor angelfish, another coral-reef species, are


covered with loops of white and light blue on a dark background.
These loops swirl around a large eyespot near the angelfish’s tail,
while its actual eyes disappear among the stripes on its head. A
predator’s gaze is naturally pulled to the wrong end.
Insects also use eyespots in their deflection displays. These
eyespots are always visible, not like the eyespots used to startle
predators. They are also smaller and closer to the wings’ edges.
Many species of butterfl ies sport such eyespots on their
hind wings. A bird that snaps at the wrong end of such a but-
terfly leaves notches in the wings but loses out on a meal. Some
32 AnimAl deFenses

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

Tail markings are common among animals, and some scien-


tists are taking a second look at them to see which ones may be
used as deflection displays. The black tip on a weasel’s tail, for
example, may help trick a hawk into trying to grab the skinny tail
instead of the body or head.

LOSING LIMBS AND TAILS


Some animals whose tails are grabbed have a surprise in store
for their attackers. Shockingly, their tails break off while their
owners escape.
Many North American species of skinks, for example, have
bright blue tails when they are young. A skink’s blue tail works as
a deflection display to protect its head. But if a predator actually
seizes the tail, it breaks off. The skink runs away, leaving its tail
wriggling and squirming behind it. The predator gets nothing
but a bony mouthful. The skink’s tail later grows back.
The broken-tail trick is used by many kinds of lizards, even
ones that do not have brightly colored tails. Geckos, anoles, and
iguanas all can shed their tails. This is also true of some legless
lizards, which are called “glass snakes” because of the way their
tails shatter when they break. The predator doesn’t break these
lizards’ tails: The lizards do it themselves. The movement of mus-
cles in the tail causes one of the tailbones to snap in half.
Some rodents can also shed part of their tails. Spiny rats,
which live in parts of South and Central America, have tails that
break off. Gerbils and some species of rats and mice lose the
outer layer of skin and fur on their tails. The spiny rats are left
with stumps, but rodents that shed their tails’ covering lose the
rest of the tail later. Unlike lizards, rodents do not grow back the
missing parts.
Tails are not the only body parts shed by animals. Some
animals dispose of their limbs instead. Some species of octopus
34 AnimAl deFenses

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

by sticky mucus covering their bodies. If a sea cucumber is at-


tacked, it expels its internal organs from its hind end. The sticky
guts can trap a crab or startle a bigger predator. Then the sea
cucumber creeps away while its attacker either struggles with the
messy organs or eats them. Within a few weeks, the sea cucum-
ber grows new organs.

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

SEA SLUGS VERSUS


SPINY LOBSTER
octopuses, squids, and cuttlefish squirt ink as they escape.
scientists assumed this was a defense behavior. now, be-
cause of a recent discovery in sea slugs, researchers are
taking a closer look at the ink.
certain species of sea slugs also produce inky clouds.
the ink was known to taste bad. now, however, scientists
know that the ink changes the behavior of a predator called
the spiny lobster. chemicals in the ink seem to muddle the
lobster’s actions. An “inked” lobster gives up its attack on
a slug. it may groom itself and begin digging and grabbing
at the sand with its claws, as if it were feeding. perhaps
other animals’ ink also affects their predators in ways yet
to be discovered.

animal that is threatening it, the opossum “drops dead.” It rolls


onto its side, rounds its back, and goes limp. Its tongue lolls from
its open mouth. Its eyes close halfway—just enough to let it keep
track of its predator. An opossum will keep playing dead even if
the predator bites it. It does not revive until the predator goes
away and the coast is clear again.
Hognose snakes also use other defenses before resorting to
playing dead. A frightened hognose snake will first raise its head,
spread its neck wide, and hiss. Then, it will produce a bad smell.
If this act fails, the snake flips onto its back and lies still. Like
the opossum, it opens its mouth and lets its tongue hang out. If
it is picked up and placed on its belly, it will keep flipping onto its
back and playing dead.
3
Animal Armor

A giAnt reptile lumbers through a patch of low-growing


plants. It swings its head to the side to snatch a mouthful of
leaves. The head is covered with flat, bony plates. Sharp tri-
angles stick out from the sides like horns. Spikes also run down
the sides of its broad, domed back, which is shingled with bony
plates.
This spiky, armored reptile is an ankylosaurus, a dinosaur
that lived about 70 million years ago. It was one of the most heav-
ily armored of all dinosaurs. The bony plates in its skin were
welded to its skeleton in some places. Even its eyelids contained
pads of bone.
Few meat-eating dinosaurs could take on this armored di-
nosaur, which was as long as a school bus and as heavy as a tank.
If a predator did try to sink its teeth into an ankylosaurus’s
armored back, the reptile had one more defense. It swung its
huge tail at its enemy—a tail that ended in a massive club of
fused bone.
Armor was a primary form of defense for prehistoric animals.
Today, many animals still use it. Sharp spikes and spines, tough
bony plates, shells, and thick skin help protect animals from the
teeth, jaws, and claws of predators.

38
Animal Armor 39

spikes And spines


Most insects have thick outer skeletons that serve as armor.
These exoskeletons may also boast spikes and spines, which add
to an insect’s defense. Many species of crickets and grasshoppers,
for example, have spines on their legs and backs. Many ants have
spines in the middle of their back that protect them from other
insects’ nipping jaws. Praying mantises have spurs on their claws
that not only help in grabbing prey, but also inflict wounds on
predators.
Caterpillars typically have soft bodies. This makes them
tempting morsels for predators. But most caterpillars have other
ways to protect themselves. Some have spikes or spiny, hair-like

A caterpillar’s bristles, like those of this gypsy moth caterpillar, can be


used as a defense against predators.
40 AnimAl deFenses

bristles. Caterpillars can be so bristly that they appear to have


fur. The bristles irritate a predator’s skin and eyes. If a predator
accidentally inhales some bristles, they can hurt its nose, throat,
and lungs.
Other small animals have spines, spikes, and bristles, too.
The spined spider has an array of big, red spines on its body. Mil-
lipedes have bundles of barbed bristles along their bodies and on
their hind ends. These bristles come off and get stuck in the faces
and jaws of ants and other predators.
Large spiders called tarantulas also defend themselves with
bristles. A tarantula uses two of its hind legs to rub bristles off its
abdomen, which sends hundreds of the tiny barbed bristles at the
attacker. The bristles irritate its eyes, nose, and mouth.
Spikes and spines also protect animals that live underwa-
ter. The tiny young, or larvae, of crabs have spines that help
them float while also repelling fish. Likewise, spiny lobsters are
protected by spines that line their antennae and point forward
along their shells. The crown-of-thorns sea star is also spiny.
This sea star has as many as 19 arms, with sturdy pink or yel-
low spines poking out of its orange, red, and purple skin. The
spines not only pierce skin, but also deliver a dose of painful
venom.
Sea urchins are like living pincushions. Their hard, round
bodies bristle with spines. An urchin uses its spines to help it
move. The sharp spines also keep many predators at bay. Some
sea urchins’ spines are connected to glands that make venom.
Long-spined hatpin urchins have venomous spines that can be
up to 12 inches (30 cm) long. Some species of fish and jellyfish
hide in hatpin urchins.
Stonefish have spines connected to venom glands, too. These
are well-camouflaged fish that lie on the seabed in some tropical
waters. Their spines pierce and kill predators that grab them.
Surgeonfish, which also live in tropical waters, have a pair of
Animal Armor 41

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

swallow. It startles other predators, which may decide not to


tackle the suddenly enlarged prey.
A variety of lizards also wear spike-studded armor. The
well-named thorny devil resembles a miniature dragon as it
strolls across the Australian sand, looking for ants to eat. Spikes
of many sizes jut from its legs, sides, tail, back, and head. De-
spite its name, a thorny lizard is not aggressive. If threatened, it
tucks its head between its front legs. This makes a large, spiky
bump on its neck stick out—a bump that looks like an even
more unappetizing head than the lizard’s actual one.
Just as prickly are the horned lizards of dry lands and des-
erts in parts of Mexico and the southwestern United States. A

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

A young lion tries to fl ip over an African crested porcupine in order


to kill it in South Africa, where porcupines are the principal diet of
Kalahari lions.

Hedgehogs are also prickly. A European hedgehog has about


5,000 short, sharp spines. Unlike a porcupine’s quills, hedgehog
spines do not come out of the skin when used for jabbing.
A hedgehog usually flees or hides in the face of danger. If
it is cornered, it raises its spines and then rolls into a ball, pro-
tecting its soft belly and its head. A hedgehog can stay rolled
up for many hours, and a predator is likely to give up prodding
the unresponsive, prickly ball. An uncurled hedgehog, however,
may leap backward into a predator or thrust its spiny body into
its face.
Spines also protect spiny anteaters called echidnas. Echid-
nas are Australian monotremes (egg-laying mammals) that eat
Animal Armor 45

insects, snaring them with their long, sticky tongues. Hundreds


of spines cover an echidna’s body. A spine can be about 2 inches
(60 mm) long. If threatened, an echidna digs quickly into the
ground, leaving only its spiny back showing. It can also roll up
into a ball or wedge itself into a crevice among rocks.

ARMORED ON THE INSIDE


some animals have spikes that come into play only when
they are attacked. Among these unusual animals is a mam-
mal called the potto.
the potto is a slow-moving, tree-dwelling African ani-
mal. three bones in its neck end in thick spines that stick
up through the skin. the spines usually are buried in its
thick fur. however, if threatened, a potto curls up so that
its neck bends and the spines stick up. some scientists
have recently found that the spines are sensitive to touch
and that pottos sometimes rub necks with each other.
they are researching to see if pottos use their spines to
communicate with one another.
A salamander called the sharp-ribbed newt also has
hidden spines. its spines are the ends of its ribs. if at-
tacked, the newt pushes its ribs so that they form rows of
bumps on its back. there are poison glands on the bumps.
the sharp rib tips may also poke out of the newt’s skin.
the hero shrew of west Africa does not show its strength;
its armor is completely hidden inside. this armor is its one-
of-a-kind backbone. each bone in its spine has ridges on it
and fits snugly into the bones on either side of it. the spine
is also very flexible, and the ribs attached to it are very thick.
A person weighing 160 pounds (2 kilograms) can stand on
the shrew’s back without harming it. why the shrew’s back is
so strong is still a mystery, though its strength may certainly
stop some predators’ jaws from crushing it.
46 AnimAl deFenses

The army of spiny mammals includes the spiny rats of Cen-


tral and South America. Some species of spiny rats have sturdy
spines, while others have stiff, bristly hair. Spiny rats can also
shed their tails to escape a predator’s grip. Another group of
spiny mammals, the tenrecs, is found on Madagascar, an island
off the east coast of Africa. A tenrec can roll up into a ball like a
hedgehog. It also has a powerful bite and will butt its enemy in
the neck with its spiny head.

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.

Snails, clams, mussels, and other mollusks also are protected


by shells. The soft, boneless body of a mollusk is covered with a
kind of skin called a mantle. In the mantle are glands that pro-
duce the materials that form the shell. These materials include
minerals that the mollusk gets from its food and from the water,
sand, or soil in which it lives.
A snail seems to carry its shell on its back, but much of its
body is actually inside the shell. If threatened, the snail pulls its
head and its muscular foot inside the shell. Many kinds of snails
seal the shell’s opening with a hard plate on the end of the foot.
Sea snails called limpets have feet that work like suction cups and
help them grip rocks firmly so that they are difficult to pry off.
48 AnimAl deFenses

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.

Clams, oysters, and mussels are all bivalves: mollusks with


two-part shells. A bivalve has a hinge between the halves of its
shell. Depending on the species, it can partly or fully close its
shell around its body. Many bivalves burrow deeply in sand or
mud to stay hidden from predators, such as seabirds.
Mollusks called chitons have shells made of eight plates.
A chiton clings to a rock with its wide, flat foot as it grazes on
algae. It hangs on tightly enough to prevent being washed away
by waves. If a predator manages to pull it off the rock, the chiton
rolls up into an armor-plated ball.
Animal Armor 49

In recent years, researchers discovered a snail living on the


deep-sea floor that actually wears metal armor. This snail has not
only a protective shell, but also extra-tough skin. Scales made of
minerals, including iron, cover its soft body.

SCALES, SCUTES, AND SKIN


Tough skin and scales may be unusual in snails. However, they
are typical armor for many other animals.
Armadillos, for example, are armor-plated mammals that live
in Central and South America, as well as in parts of the southern

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

United States. Their name, which means “little armored one” in


Spanish, refers to their bony armor. Scientists call the armadillo’s
armor a carapace.
The carapace is made up of bony plates arranged in bands
around the armadillo’s body. The plates are covered by tough
skin. Each bony band is separated from the ones next to it by a
band of skin, allowing the armadillo to flex its body. The arma-
dillo found in the United States is called the nine-banded arma-
dillo. Its armor covers its head, body, legs, and tail. Only its belly
and ears are unprotected.
If a coyote or other predator threatens it, a nine-banded
armadillo’s first defense is to flee. It zigzags as it runs away. If it
cannot run away, it digs with its strong claws. It burrows into the
ground in less than two minutes. The predator may pull on the
armadillo’s tail to yank it out of the burrow. This won’t work be-
cause the armadillo hangs on with its claws. Its bony bands also
help wedge it in place.
A nine-banded armadillo can also hunker down so that its
carapace touches the ground. Then it can pull in its nose and
feet. Playing dead or leaping abruptly into the air are other de-
fenses. It can also curl its body slightly so that its nose and tail
touch, though it cannot roll up into a ball.
The nine-banded armadillo is about the size of a cat. The
pink fairy armadillo is much smaller—about as long as a dollar
bill—but it is also a mighty digger. Like its larger cousin, it can
swiftly dig a burrow when danger threatens. It runs into the bur-
row head first and plugs the opening with a plate of armor that
covers its hind end.
The three-banded armadillo is the only armadillo that can
roll itself up so tightly that it looks like a scaly croquet ball. This
armadillo can also unroll slightly to peek out and see if its at-
tacker is still there. If the attacker comes close to investigate, the
Animal Armor 51

Only the tail, fins, eyes, and mouth stick out of a boxfi sh’s boxy suit of
armor, which is created by linked scales.

armadillo quickly slams its carapace shut again—an action that


sometimes nips the attacker’s nose.
In parts of Africa and Asia, scaly mammals called pangolins
rely on protective body armor for defense, too. A pangolin is a
long-tailed, ant-eating, nocturnal animal covered in a heavy coat
of thick, overlapping scales. Only its belly and part of its face are
exposed.
Unlike armadillos, all species of pangolin are able to roll into
a tight ball. The scales also stand on edge so that they resemble
spikes. If a predator pokes its nose between the scales, the pango-
lin can move so that the sharp scales pinch. All the while, glands
under the pangolin’s tail produce a bad-smelling fluid.
52 AnimAl deFenses

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.

penetrAting the Armor


As populations of animals change over time, they develop defens-
es. Predator populations also evolve, developing body parts and
behaviors that help them defeat their prey’s defenses. Often this
simply involves big teeth and strong jaws. A shark or crocodile,
for example, can easily crunch through a turtle’s shell. Some-
times, however, special behaviors are involved.
The bearded vulture, for example, knows how to open tur-
tles’ shells. This vulture is found in parts of Europe and Asia. It
mainly feeds on animal bones left over from other animals’ kills.
To get at the food left inside a bone, the vulture carries the bone
Animal Armor 53

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

hiding, cAmouFlAge, And escApe help many animals


stay out of the clutches of predators. Armor and other heavy-
duty outsides help many animals survive being caught. A variety
of animals use another weapon: chemicals that ward off predators
or stop their attack after it has begun.
These chemicals may have a bad taste, a terrible smell, or
both. They may irritate the skin as well as the senses. They also
may be poisonous. Some can sicken a predator, or even kill it.
Chemical defenses are secret weapons, in one way, because
they are contained inside the animals. But many animals do not
try to keep them secret. These animals often are brightly colored,
which helps warn predators that they are armed and dangerous.
They may also behave in ways that announce their intention to
use chemical defenses if pushed.
A chemical defense may be a primary defense: a defense that
exists all the time, even when the animal is not in any danger. A
poisonous insect, for example, is poisonous all the time.
A chemical defense can also be a secondary defense: a de-
fense that is put to work after the animal has been threatened or

55
56 AnimAl deFenses

attacked. A skunk, for example, doesn’t always ooze bad-smelling


fluid. First, it behaves in ways that warn the predator to go away.
It will spray predators that do not heed the warning.

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

Of course, if a poisonous animal had a choice, it would rather


not be attacked in the first place. It is better for it to stop an at-
tack before it starts. A poisonous animal does this with warning
colors, foul tastes, bad smells, irritating chemicals, and some-
times sounds.

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.

AmphiBiAn wArning colors


Many salamanders, frogs, and other amphibians are also colored
in red, black, yellow, and orange patterns. These bright colors
also serve to warn predators to stay away.
The fire salamander of Europe, for example, is black with
yellow spots or stripes. Sometimes red or orange tints appear
on its skin, too. If a predator grabs it, poisonous fluids flow
from the salamander’s skin. The salamander can even squirt
the poison.
Another amphibian, the fire-bellied toad, arches backward
to reveal its bright red or yellow underside when it is bothered.
A predator that grabs the toad anyway will quickly drop it after
getting a taste of its poisonous skin—especially if the frightened
toad has oozed so much poison that it seems to be covered in
foam.
Poison dart frogs have a rainbow of warning colors. They
may be red, orange, yellow, lime green, or cobalt blue, striped
Bad smells, Bad tastes, and powerful poisons 61

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.”

with black, depending on the species. Across the world in Africa,


banded rubber frogs are clad in poisonous skins that are black
with red stripes and spots. If attacked, they ooze a thick, sticky
fluid that is poisonous to small predators and strong enough to
irritate a human’s skin.
62 AnimAl deFenses

Warning colors are even at work underwater, especially in


the rainbow world of a coral reef. A slow-moving reef fish called
the polka-dot boxfish, for example, stands out with its yellow skin
dotted with black. This vivid skin spews sticky, poisonous mucus
when the fish is attacked. If this is not enough to stop the attack,
the boxfish’s hard, boxy body protects it. Like most animals with
warning colors, it is a sturdy creature that is hard to hurt or kill.
It has to be, in order to survive while still teaching its predators
a lesson.

smells thAt repel


Colors that announce “I taste bad” or “I am poisonous” are often
enough of a warning to potential predators. Just in case these
animals fail to believe their eyes, warning smells may be sent to
their noses as well. Animals that are well camouflaged may rely
entirely on smelling bad.
Scientists have also found that these strong odors are usually
accompanied by irritating chemicals. Just as a strong-smelling
onion irritates a person’s eyes, an animal’s strong-smelling fluids
can irritate a predator’s eyes, nasal passages, lungs, or skin.
Strong odors are frequently used as a defense by many in-
sects known as “true bugs.” True bugs have beaklike mouthparts
for piercing and sucking in food. Many of them also have stink
glands. These stink glands are located on their backs when they
are young and on their sides when they are adults.
The smelliest of all are the stink bugs. Stink bugs ooze a
vile-smelling liquid if they are disturbed. The odor is described
as smelling like a mixture of several pungent aromas—every-
thing from licorice and overripe fruit to rotten eggs and skunk.
It is strong enough to repel many birds, lizards, and other ani-
mals that eat insects.
Bad smells, Bad tastes, and powerful poisons 63

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.

If disturbed, stink bugs—like this spined stink bug—emit a strong almond


smell that is offensive to many animals.
64 AnimAl deFenses

Some species also are poisonous. All have a forked, tongue-like


body part that pops out from behind the head. It gives off a strong
smell when the caterpillar is under threat. The smell of these cat-
erpillars is often compared to dirty socks.
Other small animals also give off strong odors when threat-
ened. A daddy longlegs puts out a smelly liquid from glands on its
back when its body is grabbed. The liquid spreads across its body
and repels attackers, such as ants.
Millipedes also give off strong odors if they are disturbed.
Just the scent of some millipedes is enough to send ants scurrying

ONE WARNING FOR ALL


A gazelle that stamps its foot or stots (jumps high into the
air) sends two important messages to a predator. First, the
gazelle has seen the predator, so the predator has lost its
chance to launch a surprise attack. second, the gazelle is
strong and healthy, so it would be a waste of time to chase
it. this kind of warning is called pursuit deterrence.
pursuit deterrence is different from aposematism, the
use of warning colors or other signals to keep predators
away. A gazelle that uses pursuit deterrence tells a preda-
tor that it is a strong, healthy individual at that particular
moment. it does not mean that the predator should give
up hunting gazelles altogether.
An aposematic animal, however, has a smell, taste, or
color pattern that advertises how poor-tasting, poisonous,
or dangerous it is—just like all the rest of its species. if a
predator has tried to eat another individual of the same
species in the past, it knows that this individual will pres-
ent the same problems. warning colors and other signals
announce that every member of the species should be
avoided at all times.
Bad smells, Bad tastes, and powerful poisons 65

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.

sprAying, spitting, And spewing


Oozing, leaking, bubbling, and dripping toxic and irritating flu-
ids can repel many predators. Some animals go one step further.
Instead of letting predators get close enough to touch them, they
keep them at bay by spraying, spitting, or otherwise spewing flu-
ids at them.
Skunks are the most famous animals to use this tactic. A
skunk has musk glands under its tail that can spray a terrible-
smelling fluid at predators. Its white stripes are warning colors
that are easily seen at night, when the skunk is active. An experi-
enced predator knows to avoid it.
An inexperienced predator, however, gets a warning. Each
species has its own way of saying “back off.” A hooded skunk
stamps its feet, then turns around to raise its tail and spray. A
striped skunk also stamps and raises its tail, then curves sideways
to aim its musk glands while keeping an eye on its foe. The spot-
ted skunk stamps its front feet, then stands on them in a hand-
stand and twists its back so that its musk glands are aimed at the
predator.
Failure to heed these warnings earns the predator a blast
in the face from the skunk’s musk glands. A skunk can shoot its
smelly spray 13 feet (4 m) and hit its target. The spray not only
66 AnimAl deFenses

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

A bombardier beetle can twist its abdomen to aim in nearly


any direction. It can even shoot over its back. The hot, irritating
spray repels ants, birds, and frogs.
Another insect, a walkingstick insect called the devil’s rider,
also uses a “cannon” to spray a terrible smelling fluid. Its defen-
sive glands are located behind its head. Scientists who study this
insect report that its spray irritates their lungs as well as their
eyes. Like the bombardier, the devil’s rider can spray in almost
any direction. Unlike the bombardier, it does not wait for a bird
to attack before defending itself. It sprays when the bird is still
about 8 inches (20 cm) away.
Insects also use their mouths to shoot fluids at preda-
tors. Grasshoppers, for example, are known for their ability
to spit. This “spit” is really the grasshopper’s stomach con-
tents. It is often mixed with poisonous substances from a part
of the insect’s throat called the crop. The lubber grasshopper
of the southeastern United States, which is clad in warning
colors of black and yellow, not only spits a dark-brown stream
at predators, but also hisses at them and bubbles with irritating
foam.
The larvae of insects called sawflies also spit up their stom-
ach contents at predators. The larvae feed on eucalyptus trees
in Australia, which contain an oil that stops most insects from
eating its leaves. The oil is stored in a special pouch in a larva’s
body. If an ant, mouse, or bird attacks, the larva spits up the
thick, strong-smelling goo. The larvae of some species that feed
in groups will cluster together in a circle, with their heads facing
out. Then the whole group spits up together.
Even some birds cough up stomach contents on predators.
Many seabirds that nest on the ground, such as albatrosses, throw
up their oily, fishy meals when a predator approaches. This de-
fense behavior often is used by chicks. Birds or mammals that
68 AnimAl deFenses

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.

predAtors oF poisonous prey


Warning colors, bad tastes, foul smells, and poison—these defens-
es protect their owners from many predators, but not all. Some
predators are able to eat them without suffering any harm.
Sometimes, this ability comes from a natural resistance to
the poison. One kind of tropical snake, for example, can eat
0 AnimAl deFenses

poison dart frogs and not be harmed. It is affected only by large


amounts of toxin from the most poisonous species of frogs.
Likewise, the European hedgehog eats toads and is not af-
fected by the poison in their skin glands. It is even known to
chew on the poisonous skin and then spread the poisonous fluid
onto its own spiny body. The mongoose, a mammal that lives in
Africa and Asia, eats poisonous snakes and toads, too.
Some birds are resistant to defensive chemicals, too. The
black-headed grosbeak eats monarch butterflies. Another bird,
the northern shrike, stabs monarchs onto thorns and branches
and lets them rot for a few days. The poison in the prey breaks
down, and then the bird eats it.
Some predators can eat prey by avoiding their unpleasant
fluids. A great horned owl, for example, can snatch up a skunk
so quickly that it doesn’t have time to spray—and even if it does,
the stink doesn’t bother the owl, which has little to no sense of
smell. A species of true bug that eats meat instead of plants has an
extra-long beak, which it uses to pierce insect larvae. Thanks to
the length of this beak, the bug’s head and body never come close
to the nasty fluid that oozes from its prey. A big toad can eat a
millipede that oozes poisonous droplets, if it grabs the millipede
quickly and swallows it instantly.
The grasshopper mouse of Southwestern deserts avoids the
smelly spray of the darkling beetle with a neat trick: It shoves the
beetle’s hind end into the sand. Then the mouse eats the beetle
headfirst. Spiders use a similar tactic when they catch bombar-
dier beetles in their webs. A spider that has snared one of these
explosive beetles moves slowly and carefully as it ties up the bee-
tle with silk. Once the beetle is tightly wrapped, the spider will
eat it.
Predators also can avoid defense chemicals by removing them
from their prey. Some birds, such as blue jays, remove the head
Bad smells, Bad tastes, and powerful poisons 1

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

and digestive tract of lubber grasshoppers before eating them.


Without these parts, the insect is safe to eat.
Animals called coatis, which live in parts of the southwest-
ern United States and in Central and South America, use their
front paws to roll poisonous millipedes across the ground. The
millipedes ooze defensive chemicals, but they are wiped away by
the rolling. Then the coatis crunch up the millipedes. Another
mammal, the little angwantibo of western Africa, rubs off the
irritating hairs of the caterpillars that make up its diet.
5
Venomous Stings and Bites

venom is A poison made by an animal’s body and injected


into another animal. A venomous animal has a sting, spines, or
specialized teeth attached to venom-making glands. A poisonous
animal, on the other hand, must usually be touched or eaten by
another animal for the poison to work. A poisonous animal often
has a bad taste, foul smell, or bright color pattern warning that it
is dangerous to eat.
Some venomous animals use venom to catch their own prey.
They subdue or kill their prey by biting or stinging it. Snakes,
wasps, and spiders are examples of animals that catch prey in
this way. On the other hand, honeybees do not. They use their
venom only for defense.
Like poisonous animals, some venomous animals exhibit
warning colors. Many venomous animals, however, are camou-
flaged. This helps them sneak up on prey.
Many animals’ venom is strong enough only to harm or kill
its smaller prey. But some venom can harm or even kill much
larger animals, too. Some of the world’s stinging animals have
this powerful venom.

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

HOW VENOM WORKS


An animal’s venom is made up of many substances. the
mixture of substances is different for each venomous spe-
cies, though different mixtures include some of the same
poisonous substances.
different venoms affect the body in different ways.
some venoms affect the brain and the nerves. this kind of
venom is called a neurotoxin. A neurotoxin may make mus-
cles cramp or twitch. it may also paralyze muscles, which
can make an animal stop breathing and lead to heart failure.
other venoms harm the blood. they are called hemotoxins.
A hemotoxin may cause bleeding inside the body, or it can
make the blood clot too quickly or too slowly. venoms can
also cause swelling, severe rashes, and other reactions.
the body of a venomous animal uses energy to make
venom. this is why venomous animals prefer to hide or flee
from danger. An animal that makes venom for killing prey
would rather save its venom for hunting and not waste it on
an animal it cannot eat. even an animal that makes venom
only for self-defense is usually slow to use it. it is more
likely to hide, flee, or warn a predator to stay away.
scientists have developed substances that can stop
venoms from damaging the body. these substances are
called antivenins. Antivenins exist for many, but not all
venoms. they have saved many lives. venoms are actually
used in making the antivenins. scientists are also research-
ing venoms to find substances that can be used to make
medicines. the venom of the cone snail, for example, has
yielded a drug that is used as a painkiller.

Scorpions eat insects, snails, pillbugs, and spiders. Some spe-


cies eat lizards and mice, too. A scorpion can often overpower its
prey by grabbing it in its claws. If the prey struggles, the scorpion
curls its tail over its back and stings it.
venomous stings and Bites 

Most scorpions’ stings are only mildly painful to humans,


but about 25 species have venom strong enough to kill a person.
Besides using their venom to kill prey, scorpions also will sting to
defend themselves against predators, such as birds, rats, lizards,
centipedes, and other scorpions. Yet, a scorpion’s primary de-
fense is camouflage. Tan, brown, and black coloring helps scor-
pions hide in their habitats.

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.

The venom paralyzes or kills prey so that the cnidarian can


drag it to its mouth and eat it. Cnidarians eat a variety of prey,
depending on their size. Anemones look like plants rooted in
sand and mud or on rocks and coral reefs. However, they are
animals, and they feed on small fish, crabs, and shrimp. Coral
polyps, which make up coral reefs, feed on tiny animals called
zooplankton that drift in the water. Many jellyfish feed on fish
and shrimp.

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

swallow. Among the ranks of these bristly beasts are animals


whose spines also are venomous.
Caterpillars of different species, for example, often have
barbed hairs as part of their defense systems. The hairs irritate
predators. Some species’ hairs also are attached to venom glands.
These hairs not only pierce predators, but also inject venom.
Often a predator is jabbed merely by touching the caterpillar.
Some kinds of caterpillars arch their bodies to stab their spines
into a predator as it attacks.
The saddleback caterpillar is a bristly brown caterpillar
with a green “saddle blanket” on its back. When its hairs are
touched, they stick in the predator’s skin and their tips break
off, allowing venom to flow out from the caterpillar’s body

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

through the hollow hairs. Saddlebacks are found in the eastern


United States. A saddleback’s sting causes pain and swelling at
the site of the sting, and can make a person feel nauseated.
Flannel moth caterpillars also have venomous hairs. The
fuzzy caterpillars look soft enough to pet, but their powerful
venom causes severe pain and swelling. Some flannel moth cat-
erpillars in South America have such strong venom that they can
temporarily paralyze a human. In Brazil, they are known as “fire
beasts” because of their painful sting. Another South American
caterpillar, the larva of the giant silkworm moth, inflicts stings
that can be deadly to humans.
Venomous spines also are found on a number of sea crea-
tures, such as stingrays. Stingrays are flat-bodied cousins of

A sharp, venomous spine on a stingray’s tail helps it defend itself from


predators, such as sharks.
venomous stings and Bites 81

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

A large stars-and-stripes toadfi sh swims over a coral reef. Toadfi sh use


their venomous spines against predators, and their camouflaged body
color and spines help them hunt prey.

Venomous toadfish nestle in sand in the warm, shallow wa-


ters of Central and South America. Like weevers, they sport
venomous spines on their backs and gill covers. Their drab,
brown-and-gray coloring helps camouflage them as they lie in
wait to catch fish and other small prey with their wide, toothy
mouths. The hollow spines are used only for injecting venom
into predators.
Another well-camouflaged fish of shallow ocean water is the
warty, slow-moving stonefish. It releases venom when the spines
in its back fin are pressed. The venom shoots along grooves in
venomous stings and Bites 83

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.

A lionfi sh spreads out its venomous spiny fins in warning.


84 AnimAl deFenses

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

This juvenile king cobra is giving off a warning sign by hissing.

A rattlesnake’s colors and patterns help camouflage it. If it


is spotted by a predator, the rattlesnake will try to slither away
from danger. Yet, if a predator bothers it, the rattlesnake coils up
and rattles its hollow, scaly tail sections.
Another venomous North American snake, the cottonmouth
or water moccasin, sends a warning by stretching open its white-
lined mouth. The world’s deadliest snake, the black mamba of Af-
rica, also warns away enemies by opening its black-lined mouth.
A recently discovered species of venomous snake in Asia is able to
change colors. This behavior has earned it the name “chameleon
snake.” Scientists think the color changes may be a warning to
predators.
86 AnimAl deFenses

Some kinds of snakes, such as coral snakes, are clad in warn-


ing colors that advertise their venomous nature. Coral snakes are
ringed with bands of black, red, and either white or yellow. These
relatives of cobras live in North, Central, and South America,
where they prey mainly on lizards and other snakes.
Unlike snakes, the world’s two species of venomous lizards
use their venom mainly for self-defense, not hunting. The Mexi-
can beaded lizard and its smaller cousin, the Gila (pronounced
“heela”) monster, are both slow-moving animals that feed main-
ly on eggs, baby rodents, and baby birds found in nests on the
ground. If disturbed, these lizards bite with their strong jaws.
Venom flows through the teeth from glands in their lower jaws.
The lizards chew their victims so the venom sinks inside them.
Both species have bright warning colors: They are black, with
yellow or pink uneven bands.
Vivid warning colors also adorn venomous centipedes, such
as the giant Sonoran centipede. This many-legged animal, which
lives in some of the same desert lands as the Gila monster, can
grow to be 8 inches (20 cm) long and is boldly patterned in or-
ange and black. It bites insects, worms, frogs, and other prey with
a pair of sharp, claw-like fangs near its head. Muscles squeeze
venom out of a gland in each fang. Like snakes, centipedes use
venom for defense as well as hunting.
Spiders’ venom also does double duty. Many spiders catch
their prey in webs, then deliver a killing bite with their fangs.
Hunting spiders lie in wait for their prey, or prowl about in
search of prey and then pounce on it like a tiger. They hang on
to their prey with their legs while they bite it, killing it with
venom.
Spiders also bite predators that attack them. Most spiders’
fangs are not strong enough to pierce predators’ skin, though,
and the venom is not strong enough to harm. A few spiders do
venomous stings and Bites 8

have powerful venom. The black widow spider’s venom is more


potent than many snakes’ venom. The brown recluse spider has
venom strong enough to make a person feel ill for several days.
Like all spiders, however, these species would rather hide from
danger than bite someone.
Octopuses also would rather hide, but they will bite if they
are stepped on or attacked. An octopus uses its venom and its
strong, sharp beak to kill crabs, fish, and other prey. Most octo-
pus venom is not strong enough to do great harm to humans, but
the venom of blue-ringed octopuses can kill.
Different species of blue-ringed octopuses live in parts of
the Indian Ocean and the western Pacific Ocean. Normally,
they wear camouflaging colors of brown, gray, and pale yel-
low. But if they are disturbed, bright blue rings suddenly ap-
pear. These rings are warning colors—and the warning is not
a bluff.
A greater blue-ringed octopus makes one kind of venom for
hunting and another kind for self-defense. This little octopus,
which is no bigger than a golf ball, contains enough venom to kill
about 25 people in just a few minutes. Most people harmed by a
blue-ringed octopus have either picked it up or stepped on it.
The ocean contains another group of animals that are among
the world’s most venomous animals: the cone snails. There are
about 600 species of cone snail. Most are found in tropical waters
and on coral reefs. Only a small number contain venom that is
deadly to humans.
Cone snails use their venom to kill prey, such as worms,
snails, and fish. The venom is delivered by a bite that works much
like a sting or harpoon. The snail shoots out a tube attached to
a sharp, hollow tooth. Venom flows from a gland in the snail
through this tube and into the prey. The snail uses its venom in
self-defense when it is attacked by a hungry fish.
88 AnimAl deFenses

predAtors oF venomous AnimAls


Many animal species have changed over time so that they can
eat poisonous animals and plants without harm. In the same way,
some animals have evolved to hunt and eat venomous animals.
Bumblebees are venomous and can sting repeatedly, like
wasps. Yet skunks, foxes, badgers, and other mammals will raid

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

resistant to the venom of certain snakes. King snakes, which are


not venomous, are immune to other snakes’ venom. They are
known to eat rattlesnakes, copperheads, and other venomous
snakes. Frogs tolerate the stings of the ants that they eat, as do
the horned lizards of North American deserts.
6
Mimicry

A yellow And BlAck insect approaches a flower. Its wings


make a loud buzzing sound as it hovers above the petals. A toad,
hiding under a nearby leaf, sees the insect, but makes no move
to nab it. Once, it gobbled up a bumblebee and was stung on its
tongue. This painful experience taught the toad a lifelong lesson.
What the toad does not know is that this insect is not really
a bumblebee. It is a harmless American hover fly—an insect that
would make a fine meal for a toad. To the toad, the insect’s color,
sound, and behavior all warn “bumblebee.” If the toad could talk,
it would probably mutter, “Better safe than sorry.”
The hover fly is a mimic—an animal that looks like another
kind of animal and benefits from this resemblance. The hover fly
gains protection from predators by looking like a bee. Mimicry
also includes sounding, smelling, acting, or otherwise resembling
another animal. Scientists call the animal that is being mimicked
the model.
Mimicry is different from the imitating used by animals to
hide. An insect that looks like a leaf, for example, is imitating
something that does not interest a predator. It is hidden, or cam-
ouflaged, by being a leaf look-alike. An insect that looks and acts
like a bee, however, is not hiding. It is imitating a living thing

91
92 AnimAl deFenses

The harmless hover fl y benefi ts from looking just like a sting-ready


bumblebee.

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

Since then, scientists have learned much more about mim-


icry. They have found animals that mimic their prey in order to
hunt them, venomous animals that mimic less harmful animals,
and other animals that mimic animals in order to live inside their
nests. Scientists have learned that mimics and models may form

THE DISCOVERERS OF MIMICRY


the two main types of mimicry, Batesian and müllerian,
are named after the scientists who first suggested them:
henry Bates and Fritz müller.
henry Bates was an english naturalist who lived from
1825 to 1892. in 1848, he traveled to south America to
study insects. Bates spent 11 years in the Amazon rainfor-
est. he collected thousands of insects, about half of which
had never been seen by scientists before.
during his stay, Bates noticed that some species of
nonpoisonous butterflies looked very much like the bright-
ly colored, poisonous butterflies in the same area. he real-
ized that the edible butterflies were mimicking the poison-
ous ones. Bates wrote about his discoveries in 1862.
his work inspired other researchers. one of them was
Fritz müller, a german scientist. müller followed up on a
puzzle that Bates had noticed in Brazil. Bates had seen
poisonous butterflies that belonged to different species,
but resembled one another. müller published a paper in
188 explaining that by looking alike, both species shared
the burden of teaching predators to leave them alone. the
evolution of similar appearances benefits both species be-
cause each one loses fewer individuals than it would if
it had to deal with predators on its own. that evolution
would happen because butterflies with lookalike colors
and patterns would have a better chance of survival and
would produce more young than butterflies that didn’t.
94 AnimAl deFenses

large, complex patterns known as mimicry rings. They have


even found mimicry in plants. Yet, many of the animal world’s
mimics still fit into the two categories discovered more than 100
years ago.

insects And BAtesiAn mimicry


The concept of Batesian mimicry was first revealed by studies of
butterflies. It was later found in many other insects.
Bees and wasps are among the most commonly mimicked
insects. Mimics of these stinging insects are found in several dif-
ferent, unrelated families of insects.
The yellow-and-black American hover fly is one of many
flies that mimic bees. For starters, there are about 6,000 other
species in the hover fly’s insect family. Most of these species look
like bees or wasps. Some species even hold up their front legs
when they land and wave them around. This makes their legs
look like antennae.
Another group of flies that also contains bee mimics is the
aptly named bee-fly family. Bee flies are plump, fuzzy flies that
resemble bees and also hover above flowers. A third fly family,
the robber flies, mimics bees and wasps but preys on other in-
sects, including bees.
Some kinds of beetles mimic bees and wasps. A North Amer-
ican beetle called the flat-headed bald cypress sapwood borer has
wasp-like black and yellow stripes. These stripes are on the hard
front pair of wings that all beetles have.
Most beetles hold up these wings (called elytra) and use a
second pair of wings to fly. But the borer does not. It keeps its
elytra clamped down while flying, so it still looks like a wasp.
Birds seem to like to eat this beetle, but its wasp-like markings
help repel them. Other species related to the borer also mimic
wasps.
mimicry 95

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

also tastes bad. It is mimicked by two other species of butterfly,


as well as a moth.
One of the most dazzling mimics among butterflies is the
African swallowtail. Females of this species have different colors;
they mimic different bad-tasting butterflies, depending on where
they live. In one area, females are orange, black, and white. In

THE MIMIC OCTOPUS


the mimic octopus is named for its stunning ability to mimic
not one, but at least three dangerous animals that share its
tropical ocean home. it can strike poses and change colors
to make itself look like a venomous lionfish, a venomous
sea snake, and a poisonous fish called the banded sole.
like other octopuses, the mimic octopus can easily
change the shape and color of its rubbery body. many octo-
puses use these abilities to camouflage themselves, squeeze
into hiding places, and communicate with one another. the
mimic octopus, however, is the first species known to imi-
tate dangerous sea creatures to defend itself.
to imitate the sole, the octopus pulls its eight arms
together into a wedge-shaped bundle and jets forward.
this makes it look like a flat-bodied sole rippling through
the water. to mimic a lionfish, the octopus spreads out
its arms and lets them dangle so that they look like the
lionfish’s venomous, flared fins. it mimics a sea snake by
changing its brown and white stripes to black and yellow,
then tucking most of its body and all but two of its arms
into a burrow. the two exposed arms wriggle and squirm
like writhing sea snakes.
the mimic’s performances have been caught on film.
researchers suspect that the octopus may mimic stingrays,
jellyfish, and other sea animals.
98 AnimAl deFenses

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.

other BAtesiAn mimics


Batesian mimicry is common among insects. It is also common
in many other invertebrates.
Some of the most remarkable mimics in this group are nudi-
branchs. A nudibranch is a kind of sea slug. Nudibranchs eat algae,
anemones, coral polyps, and sponges. Some species also eat other
nudibranchs. Their colorful meals provide much of their own
color. This helps some species blend in with their surroundings.
Many nudibranchs store the venomous stings or bad-tasting
poisons of their prey and use them in their own defense. Predators
learn that the colors of these nudibranchs are warning colors. They
learn to leave them alone. Other nudibranchs mimic the colors of
the dangerous nudibranchs, and so do ocean-dwelling flatworms.
Batesian mimicry also appears in vertebrates. It is particu-
larly widespread in fish. The common sole, for example, is a Eu-
ropean fish with a fin on its back that is edged in black. It mimics
the weeverfish, which has venomous black spines in its back fin.
Both fish are well camouflaged by color and shape as they hide
in mud and sand underwater but raise their black-edged fins as a
warning when disturbed. Poisonous flatworms and venomous sea
urchins and sea snakes are also mimicked by fish.
One of the most remarkable fish mimics is a harmless spe-
cies called the comet, which lives on coral reefs of the Indian
Ocean and western Pacific Ocean. The comet is black with white
spots. When threatened by a predator, it dives into a crack in the
reef, leaving its hind end sticking out. Then the fish raises the
fins on its tail, back, and underside. This reveals a large black
spot surrounded by a white ring. Now the comet’s hind end looks
Mimicry 99

almost exactly like the head of a whitemouth moray eel, a fero-


cious predator that lurks in crevices on the reef.
Some reptiles also use mimicry. In southern Africa, a bush-
veld lizard is camouflaged when fully grown, but it has black with
white spots and a dull red tail when it is young. This makes the
young lizard’s small body look like that of an oogpister beetle,
which sprays a smelly, burning fluid at predators. The little lizard
even walks like a beetle, with its tail held down so that it blends
in with the sand.
Scientists have found lizards in South America that mimic
invertebrates, too. One species of lizard curls its tail over its back
to show its orange underside when it is bothered. This makes it
look like a venomous scorpion. Another kind of South American
lizard has young that look like a poisonous millipede.
Some caterpillars mimic snakes, as do other snakes. The
false cobra of Asia, for example, is mildly venomous—its bite is
not deadly like a cobra’s. But when it is bothered, the false cobra
rises up, spreads its neck like a hood, and hisses loudly, just as the
real cobra does.
In North America, non-venomous bull snakes mimic rattle-
snakes. A bull snake does not have a rattle, but if threatened, it
will shake its tail rapidly. This rustles the leaves and grass around
it, and can startle a predator into thinking that it is dealing with
a rattlesnake.
The most famous example of snake mimicry centers on coral
snakes. There are about 65 species of coral snakes found in parts
of North, Central, and South America. They are highly venom-
ous and clad in warning colors of black and red with yellow or
white bands. Snakes that share these colors are known as false
coral snakes. Some false coral snakes are mildly venomous. Oth-
ers, such as the scarlet king snake, are non-venomous.
For many years, scientists assumed that the coral snake was
the model and the other snakes were mimics. However, it may
100 AnimAl deFenses

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

Heliconius hecale butterflies may look different in different areas, but


their co-mimics also look similar in each of those areas.

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

one another. They share their habitat with unrelated poisonous


moths that look similar, too.
Pacific beetle cockroaches are also Müllerian mimics. These
cockroaches spray a foul-smelling fluid from the sides of their
bodies at ants and other predators. They look and smell like
darkling beetles, which tip forward when threatened to spray a

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

The tiger swallowtail caterpillar can trick predators with its


large eyespots.

(continued)

these actions make the front of the caterpillar look like


a triangular snake head, complete with eyes, scales, and
small pits found on the face of a viper. the caterpillar will
even jab at a predator as if it were going to bite.
caterpillars of some swallowtail butterflies also seem
to mimic snakes. A swallowtail caterpillar’s plump front end
sports large eyespots that look as if they are staring directly
at a predator. this visual trick works even if the predator
moves from one side of the caterpillar to the other or sneaks
behind it. some scientists, however, think these caterpillars
may be mimicking bad-tasting tree frogs instead.
mimicry 105

stinky fluid. They are often called “stink beetles” as a result. (A


Batesian mimic, the cactus longhorn beetle, copies the darkling
beetle’s behavior but does not have any smelly spray.)

the monArch ButterFly’s story


Scientists are studying mimicry in many insects and other ani-
mals. They are studying bumblebees, plant-sucking bugs, poison
dart frogs, sea slugs, sea cucumbers, and flatworms, as well as
other butterflies and moths. In recent years, scientists found that
one of the most common examples of a Batesian model and mimic
was wrong. This pair consists of the monarch butterfly and the
viceroy butterfly.
The monarch is a beautiful orange, black, and white butter-
fly of North, South, and Central America. It feeds on poisonous
milkweed plants as a caterpillar. It is unharmed by the poison
and stores it up in its body to make itself poisonous to predators.

The monarch (left)


left) and viceroy ( right
left right) butterflies are now thought to be
part of a group of Müllerian mimics—harmful animals that mimic other
harmful animals.
106 AnimAl deFenses

This protection lasts into adulthood. Birds that grab monarchs


quickly drop them, or throw them up if they have already swal-
lowed them. Studies show that such birds refuse to eat monarchs
or their look-alikes again.
One of the monarch’s look-alikes is the viceroy butterfly.
For more than 100 years, the viceroy was thought to be a Bates-
ian mimic of the monarch: tasty, but avoided by birds because
of how it looked. In 1991, scientists put an idea to the test. They
removed the wings from dead butterflies, including some mon-
archs and viceroys, then fed the bodies to red-winged blackbirds.
The experiment showed that the birds found the viceroys just as
nasty-tasting as the monarchs.
The viceroy and the monarch are now thought to be part of a
group of Müllerian mimics that includes the monarch’s relatives,
the soldier butterfly and the queen butterfly.
7
Fighting Back

A Bull moose grazing in a field suddenly jerks up his head.


He senses that wolves are nearby. Ears pricked, nostrils flared, he
stares in the wolves’ direction.
The wolves stare back. They had quietly stalked the moose
for nearly half an hour. Once they got close, they intended to
do what wolves always do when hunting: charge full speed at
the moose. This rush usually made prey run away so the wolves
could chase it.
Not this time. They had lost the advantage of surprise.
The alert moose had sensed them. He did not run, but stood his
ground and continued to return their stare.
The moose, without moving a muscle, is sending the wolves
many signals. By standing his ground and looking at them, he
warns the predators that they have been seen, and that he is more
than a match for them.
The wolves are aware of this. They have speed, strength, and
sharp fangs, but the moose is also well equipped for self-defense.
The massive antlers on his head are the least of their worries—a
bull moose mainly uses the antlers to battle other bull moose—
but his hard, sharp hooves are deadly. The wolves know that a

10
108 AnimAl deFenses

powerful kick from a hind hoof or a slashing kick from a front


hoof could injure or kill one of them.
The moose takes a step toward the wolves. The wolves turn
around and glide back into the woods, giving up the hunt. They
will search for easier prey.
Though wolf and moose are hunter and hunted, they are
alike in one way: Both species defend themselves with body parts
that are mainly used for other, non-defensive purposes. These
body parts did not evolve primarily as weapons for defense. The
wolf’s teeth, for example, are tools for killing prey and eating
meat. The moose’s hooves are for running, and his antlers are for
male-to-male combat in mating season.
Many animals have evolved special body parts used for de-
fense, such as stings, but many other animals defend themselves
with body parts that have evolved for other activities: eating, dig-
ging, climbing, and the like.
Hunting together, the wolves were working as a group, a be-
havior that prey species also use to their advantage. Many species
that live in herds, flocks, schools, or other groups cooperate in
defense. This defense may consist of sounding an alarm, posting
a lookout, or working together to repel a predator. In some in-
sect species, individual insects even develop into specially formed
workers called soldiers.

teeth And tusks


Animals use their teeth mainly for eating. Yet, animals primarily
thought of as predators—such as lions, wolves, and other large
carnivores—have sharp teeth and fangs for killing prey and
shearing meat from bones. These predators usually have strong
jaws, too. A hyena’s jaws can crush the leg bone of a zebra. Small-
er predators use their sharp teeth to kill prey.
Fighting Back 109

Plant-eating animals, or herbivores, have teeth adapted for


feeding on plants. Horses’ teeth push up slowly out of their jaw-
bones during their entire lives. This is to replace the top parts
that wear down from grazing. A deer has nipping teeth in the
front of its lower jaw and a tough pad on the top jaw, which it
uses to rip leaves off plants. Molars in the back are used for chew-
ing. Rodents have front teeth that grow continuously throughout
their lives. Elephants have several sets of teeth, with new sets
moving in from the back to replace worn-out ones in front.
Teeth also make good weapons. Many animals, such as lions,
tigers, dogs, bears, and badgers, show their teeth and growl if

The sharp tusks of a hippopotamus can be used as a weapon. Here, a


hippo marks its territory by opening its mouth—a behavior seen mainly
during mating season.
110 AnimAl deFenses

threatened. Some grazing animals, such as horses and zebras,


bite attackers. Mice, rabbits, and other small animals also bite if
they are caught.
Animals with special long teeth called tusks are equipped
with dangerous weapons. An elephant’s two front teeth are tusks,
which may stick out of the mouth. The tusks of a male African
elephant can be up to 8 feet (2.4 m) long. Elephants use their
tusks to dig water holes, scrape bark off trees, and spar with each
other. They also use them as weapons against lions and other
animals that prey on their calves.
Hippopotamuses use their long, razor-sharp lower teeth as
weapons. A hippo tusk can grow up to 20 inches (51 cm) long.
Males bite each other while fighting. Females use their tusks to
keep males away from their babies. If a predator comes near a
calf, the mother hippo will attack it, too. A hippo can kill a lion,
and can even bite a crocodile in half.
Another African animal, the warthog, has four tusks. Two
sharp tusks jut from the lower jaw, and two more curl from the
upper jaw. Warthogs use these tusks to dig up roots to eat. Male
warthogs also use the blunt, curled tusks when they fight one
another. If a lion threatens a warthog, the warthog runs away
or dives backward into a burrow, with its tusked snout facing
outward.

clAws, hooves, And pincers


A threatened animal with legs—two, four, or more—is most
likely to use them to escape. But if it is cornered or caught, an
animal will use its legs and feet to defend itself.
An animal with clawed toes, such as a cat or raccoon, kicks
and scratches to defend itself. It may also bite at the same time.
A kangaroo not only bites and punches with its clawed front feet,
Fighting Back 111

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.

horns And Antlers


Many kinds of hoofed animals grow horns or antlers on their
heads. Horns are bones that grow out of the skulls of sheep,
goats, cattle, and antelope, such as gazelles. These bones are cov-
ered by a layer of tough material called horn. Horned animals do
not shed their horns. Antlers also are made of bone, but they fall
off and grow again each year. Unlike horns, antlers divide into
branches.
At first glance, a deer’s antlers look like weapons for self-
defense, but they are used more for interacting with other
deer. Their use as weapons against predators is not their main
purpose.
112 AnimAl deFenses

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

Male deer of most species grow antlers, while females do


not. The males use their antlers in battles with other males over
females. In these battles, the males shove their antlered heads
against each other and jab at each other’s sides. Female reindeer
and caribou do grow antlers, but they shed them later in the year
than males do. The females use antlers to keep other herd mem-
bers out of the feeding holes they have scraped in the snow.
Horns grow on both males and females in many species of
goat, sheep, cattle, and antelope. Males use their horns to battle
with other males over females. They also use horns as weapons
for self-defense. Females use their horns to defend themselves
and their young against predators. Females of large species of
antelope are more likely to have horns than females of smaller
species. These smaller species tend to hide and use camouflage
for protection.
Both male and female rhinoceroses have horns on their faces.
Asian rhinos have one horn. African rhinos have two. These
horns are not made of bone. They are made of keratin—the same
material found in fingernails, toenails and hair.
Male rhinos use their horns in battles with one another.
Both males and females will also charge at intruders. Predators,
such as lions, are not willing to tackle a grown rhino, but they
do try to catch calves. The white rhino, an African species, can
protect a calf simply by standing still with the baby hiding under
her huge, two-horned head.

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

Living in a group helps animals defend themselves against


predators in several ways. Lone animals must rely only on their
own senses, but an animal in a group benefits by having lots of
other animals’ eyes, ears, and noses on the alert for danger. An
animal in a group also has a smaller chance of being the unlucky
individual picked out by a predator.
In addition, a group of animals fleeing from a predator can
create confusion. This makes it harder for a predator to focus on
one animal to catch. A school of fish will split in two to avoid a
predator, and then quickly regroup behind it. A herd of zebras
can become a dazzling display of black and white stripes, making
it more difficult for a lion to see where one zebra ends and an-
other begins. Starlings clump together when a hawk approaches.
This makes it harder for the hawk to single out one bird.
Animal groups may be made up of just one species. Striped
coral-reef catfish, for example, travel in a dense, ball-shaped
school when they are young. Many seabirds nest in crowded col-
onies on islands and gang up on trespassing predators.
Animals may also form mixed groups, such as the herds of
hoofed animals that migrate across Africa’s plains. There, shaggy
horned animals called gnus form herds of up to one million ani-
mals. Traveling along with them are tens of thousands of zebras
and gazelles.
Groups of animals also may work together to drive off a
predator. One of the most famous examples of group defense is
the circle formed by musk oxen. Musk oxen are huge, shaggy
cattle that live on the broad, snowy lands of the Arctic known as
the tundra. Females and young live in herds year-round. Males
join these herds for part of the year.
If wolves attack a herd, musk oxen form a circle with their
calves in the middle and their horns facing out. The wolves face
a wall of horns backed up by hundreds of pounds of muscle. Musk
oxen also will rush out and try to hook a wolf with their horns.
Fighting Back 115

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

it gives an alarm call. It makes a high-pitched scream if it sees a


hawk, and a sharp cawing sound if it sees a cat. The alarm call
warns other birds of danger. It also tells the predator that it has
been spotted.
Little birds called black-capped chickadees also send coded
alarm calls. If a chickadee sees a flying predator, such as a hawk,
it makes a soft, high-pitched call. This tells other birds to hide.
Other calls are used to warn of predators that are perched on a
branch or on the ground. These calls warn other birds that a
predator is near, and even tell them how dangerous it is.

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.

A chickadee that sees a small owl perched in a tree, for exam-


ple, adds extra “dee” sounds to the end of its “chick-a-dee” call.
These extra sounds warn other chickadees that a very dangerous
predator is in the area. A big owl gets one extra “dee.” This is
Fighting Back 119

because the small owl is quick enough to catch a chickadee, but


the big owl is not; it is more likely to hunt for mice and rats.
Some mammals, such as meerkats, also communicate in-
formation about predators with their alarm calls. A meerkat on
guard duty peeps quietly to let others know that everything is
fine. If it sees an eagle, it gives a call that sends meerkats scurry-
ing into burrows. If it sees a snake, it gives a call that tells other
meerkats to climb trees instead. Yet another call tells other meer-
kats to mob a less-dangerous predator and chase it away.
Vervet monkeys, found in Africa, have one call that means
a big cat, such as a leopard, is near. This call tells other ver-
vets to climb high up into a tree. Another call means an eagle is
overhead. This causes monkeys to hide in a bush or among the
branches of a tree. A third call means “snake.” Monkeys stand
up on their hind legs and look around carefully when they hear
this call.
Other species of monkey—as well as ground squirrels, tree
squirrels, and lemurs—also use different calls for different pred-
ators. Scientists have also found that one species’ alarm call may
be understood by other species. Many animals flee when they
hear other animals get excited or alarmed, but some animals ap-
pear to understand the details of the alarm. Little birds called
nuthatches know when a chickadee’s alarm call means “little owl”
and when it means “big owl.”
Not all alarm signals are calls. Alarm signals can also be
seen, smelled, or otherwise sensed. An alarmed black-tail deer
raises its tail and the hair on its rump. A patch of skin on its hind
leg also releases a strong odor. The pronghorn, an antelope-like
animal of western North America, also raises long, white hairs
on its rump and releases a scent from its musk glands.
Insects also use smells as alarm signals. Pheromones are
scents and other chemicals used for communication. Bees, wasps,
and ants produce pheromones when they sting. The pheromones
120 AnimAl deFenses

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.

Bees, wAsps, Ants, And termites


Some insects live and work together to raise the colony’s young.
These animals are called social insects. Among the social insects
are honeybees, wasps, ants, and termites.
Honeybees live in a colony made up of one queen and thou-
sands of workers. The workers all have stings and use them to
defend the colony. A honeybee’s sting pulls out of its body and
remains in the victim’s skin, so the bee dies after it stings. A
gland near the sting releases pheromones, which bring other bees
to help in the defense.
Some species of wasps also form colonies. Yellow jackets raise
their young inside large, papery nests. They will swarm out of a
nest to attack an intruder. Paper wasps also build nests. A paper-
wasp queen attacks intruders with even more energy than her
workers. Like bees, social wasps send out chemical alarms when
they sting. Some wasp species, however, defend only themselves
and not the nest.
Fighting Back 121

All ants live in colonies and defend them. An animal that


noses around a fire-ant colony’s nest will quickly find itself facing
a swarm of ants pouring out, ready to bite.
Some species of ants have special “soldier” ants that work as
security guards for the nest. A soldier may be larger than the aver-
age worker ant. It also has bigger jaws. In some species, the soldiers
have extra-sharp jaws. In others, the soldiers have heads shaped
like shields. They use their heads to plug the nest’s entrance holes
to keep out invaders. Leafcutter ants are guarded by larger soldiers
when they leave the nest to gather leaves. They also are guarded by
tiny worker ants that perch on their backs. The worker ants watch
out for wasps that try to lay eggs on the workers.
Like ants, termites live in colonies. Workers and soldiers
take care of a queen as well as a king termite. Termite soldiers
defend the colony. They typically have thick, strong heads and
large jaws for biting.
Soldiers of some termite species spew a sticky spray from
their nozzle-shaped heads. The spray irritates ants that get hit.
The soldiers march alongside the worker termites to guard them
when they go outside to gather food. Some termite species lack
soldiers, but the workers have a strange ability: They explode,
covering their enemies with their sticky insides.

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

USING HEAT IN SELF-DEFENSE


rattlesnakes and some other snakes can find prey by sens-
ing the heat it produces. recently, scientists have found
that one kind of prey, the california ground squirrel, uses
its body heat to defend itself against these snakes.
An alarmed ground squirrel waves its tail to make itself
seem larger. this can help it fend off a snake. if the snake
senses heat, however, the squirrel also causes its tail to
grow warmer. this makes the squirrel’s “heat image” look
larger to the snake. these squirrels do not heat up their
tails unless the snake is a species that can sense heat.
Japanese honeybees also use heat as a defense. giant
hornets raid the bees’ nests to eat the honey. then they
carry the young, still-growing bees back to their nests to
feed to their own young.
the hornets’ attack begins with one “scout” hornet,
which marks the bees’ nest with a pheromone. the phero-
mone lures dozens of other hornets to the nest to carry
out the raid.
european honeybees imported to Japan try to fight
back by stinging, but the hornets kill them all in just a few
hours. Japanese honeybees, however, have evolved a way
to kill the hornets. when a scout hornet arrives, up to 500
bees swarm around it. they vibrate their bodies to produce
heat. the temperature rises inside the cluster of bees. the
bees can stand the heat, but it is too hot for the hornet: it
bakes to death before it gets a chance to spread its phero-
mones on the nest.

In many cases, new predators introduced into a species’ habi-


tat cause this arms race to escalate. Often, prey animals cannot
keep up. Many birds that nest on islands, for example, are not
well defended against land predators. No such predators lived on
their islands, so they did not need to evolve defensive behaviors
Fighting Back 123

against them. Human visitors to these islands brought predators


such as cats and rats. In some places, these predators have nearly
wiped out the defenseless island animals.
Scientists who research predator-prey relationships learn not
only about the history and evolution of the animals’ behaviors,
but also about their future. Recent studies seem to show that
when predators become extinct in an area, the prey animals often
start losing their defense behaviors. For example, moose living in
places where predators had been hunted to extinction did not act
like moose living where predators were plentiful. Moose living
in places with no wolves were alarmed when they smelled wolves,
but they showed only mild interest and did not leave the area.
In places where wolves had returned, however, moose began
to show defense behaviors over time. They started becoming
alarmed when they heard wolves howl. In one park where bears
had returned, female moose began having their calves close to
roadways, where the bears would not approach them.
Prey animals have learned to use humans and their construc-
tions as “safe harbors” in other places. Vervet monkeys in parts of
Africa hang out near ranger stations, where leopards do not go.
In Nepal, deer likewise find safety from tigers by staying near a
tourist center.
As scientists research animal behavior, they continue to find
new behaviors. They also find clues that shed light on past ob-
servations of animal behavior. These discoveries help increase
understanding of predators and prey and how they interact. The
knowledge gained may help scientists and others consider how
human activities, such as development and fishing, affect these
complex systems.
Glossary
Adaptations Behaviors, body shapes, and other features that help
a species survive and reproduce
Aposematism Colors, smells, behaviors, and other adaptations
that prey use to warn predators
Batesian mimicry A form of mimicry in which a harmless animal
resembles a poisonous, venomous, or otherwise harmful animal
Carnivore An animal that uses its sharp teeth to kill and eat its
prey
Chain mail A kind of armor made from small metal rings linked
together
Crypsis The ability of an animal to avoid being noticed by preda-
tors or other animals
Deflection display A color, body part, or behavior that distracts
a predator and fools it into attacking a part of its prey, such as the
tail, that is not vital to the prey’s survival
Evolution The process in which a population of living things
changes over time
Exoskeleton The outer, hard covering of an insect or other
invertebrate
Eyespots Patterns on an animal’s body that look like eyes and are
used to startle and frighten predators
Flash coloration Hidden colors on an animal’s body that are
suddenly revealed in order to startle and distract a predator
Invertebrate An animal that does not have a backbone

124
glossary 125

Masking A defense behavior in which an animal camouflages it-


self by carrying or attaching items, such as leaves or seaweed, to its
body
Migrate To travel long distances at certain times of the year. For
example, monarch butterflies migrate south for the winter
Mimic A species that predators may avoid because it looks like
another species that’s poisonous, bad tasting, or bad smelling
Model A species that is mimicked by at least one other species
Müllerian mimicry A form of mimicry in which a harmful spe-
cies mimics another harmful species
Nematocysts The stingers of cnidarians, which include ocean
animals such as corals, anemones, and jellyfish
Pheromones Chemicals produced by an animal that affect the
behavior of other animals belonging to the same species
Predator An animal that eats other animals
Prey An animal that is eaten by other animals
Primary defenses Defenses that an animal has all the time, such
as camouflage or spiky skin
Reflex bleeding When an insect oozes blood from its joints to
confuse or distract a predator
Scutes Tough scales that are found in the skin of reptiles and the
shells of most turtles and tortoises
Secondary defenses Defenses, such as biting or spraying
musk, used only after an animal has been detected or attacked by a
predator
Startle display An animal’s use of body parts, colors, or behav-
iors to startle a predator. This gives the prey more time to escape.
Venom Poisonous substances that animals make and inject into
other animals using stings, fangs, or other body parts
Vertebrate An animal with a backbone
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1978.
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Animal World. London: J.M. Dent & Sons, Ltd., 1980.
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Films, 1977.
Eisner, Thomas. For Love of Insects. Cambridge, Mass.: The Belknap
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———. Secret Weapons: Defenses of Insects, Spiders, Scorpions, and Other
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Galan, Mark. Animal Behavior. Alexandria, Va.: Time-Life Books,


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Further
Resources
Books
Castner, James L. Surviving in the Rain Forest. Tarrytown, N.Y.:
Marshall Cavendish Corporation, 2002.
Ganeri, Anita. Prickly and Poisonous. Westport, Conn.: Reader’s Di-
gest Young Families, Inc., 1995.
Kafner, Etta, and Pat Stephens. How Animals Defend Themselves.
Tonawanda, N.Y.: Kids Can Press Ltd., 2006.
Kalman, Bobbie, and John Crossingham. What Are Camouflage and
Mimicry? New York: Crabtree Publishing Company, 2001.
Lovett, Sarah. Extremely Weird Animal Defenses. Santa Fe, N.M.:
John Muir Publications, 1997.
Perry, Phyllis J. Armor to Venom: Animal Defenses. New York: Frank-
lin Watts, 1997.
———. Hide and Seek: Creatures in Camouflage. New York: Franklin
Watts, 1997.
Petty, Kate. Animal Camouflage and Defense. Langhorne, Pa.: Chel-
sea House Publishers, 2005.
Souza, D.M. Packed with Poison! Deadly Animal Defenses. Minneapo-
lis, Minn.: Millbrook Press, 2006.
Wolfe, Art. Vanishing Act. New York: Bulfinch Press, 2005.

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.

National Wildlife Federation


http://www.nwf.org/kids/
The National Wildlife Federation’s site focuses on animals and the
environment.

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.

Science News for Kids


http://www.sciencenewsforkids.org/
News and articles about science topics, including animal behavior,
as well as science-related activities, book suggestions, games, and
puzzles; maintained by the Society for Science & the Public.

The Smithsonian National Zoological Park


http://nationalzoo.si.edu/Audiences/kids/
The Smithsonian National Zoological Park’s site offers information
about animals, puzzles, games, photographs, and Animal Cam ac-
cess to view animals at the zoo.
Picture Credits
8: Heinrich van den Berg/ 63: Larry F. Jernigan/Jupiter
Getty Images Images
13: Vit Smolek/Shutterstock 71: Daniel Cox/Jupiter
15: Kurt G/Shutterstock Images
19: Ttphoto/Shutterstock 78: Karen Gowlett-Holmes/
23: McDonald Wildlife Jupiter Images
Photog/Animals Animals 80: Orion Press/Jupiter
- Earth Scenes Images
28: Sascha Burkard/ 82: Ian Scott/Shutterstock
Shutterstock 83: Nikita Tiunov/
31: Christy Gavitt/Jupiter Shutterstock
Images 85: McDonald Wildlife
36: Habicht, Michael/ Photog/Animals Animals–
Animals Animals–Earth Earth Scenes
Scenes 92: Anthony McAulay/
39: Kathy Keifer/ Shutterstock
Shutterstock 95: Wild & Natural/ Animals
41: Lynsey Allen/ Animals–Earth Scenes
Shutterstock 102: Theodore Scott/
42: Joern/Shutterstock Shutterstock
44: J. Sneesby/B.Wilkins/ 104: Jill Lanf/Shutterstock
Getty Images 105: Marie C. Fields/
47: Oleg Z/Shutterstock Shutterstock; Leighton
49: Partridge Films Ltd./ Photography & Imaging/
Jupiter Images Shutterstock
51: Stephan Kerkhofs/ 109: National Geographic/
Shutterstock Getty Images
53: Bruce MacQueen/ 112: James Kingman/
Shutterstock Shutterstock
57: Michael Fogden/Jupiter 116: EcoPrint/Shutterstock
Images 118: Bob Blanchard/
59: Steve McWilliams/ Shutterstock
Shutterstock

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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

chickadees, 117–119 D freezing, 25


chipmunks, 13 daddy longlegs, 64 fright molting, 34
chiton, 48 darkling beetles, 66, 70 frogs, 17, 18, 25, 28, 57,
chuckwallas, 10–11 deer, 23, 109, 111–113, 60–61, 69, 90
cinnabar moths, 60, 68 119, 123
clams, 11–12, 46, 48, 54 deflection displays, G
claws, 110–111 30–33 galls, 10, 16
cnidarians, 77–78 denticles, 52 gazelles, 7–9, 64, 114
coatis, 72 dinosaurs, 38 geckos, 33, 34
cobras, 84, 89, 99 geoducks, 11–12
cochineal insects, 69 E giant desert centipedes,
cockroaches, 103–105 earthworms, 12 32
coloration, 18–19, echidnas, 44–45 Gila monsters, 86
58–62, 86 echolocation, 26 giraffes, 111
comet fish, 98–99 elephant hawk-moths, glass snakes, 33
co-mimics, 92, 93, 100, 103 golden frogs, 57
101–105 elephants, 109, 110 grasshopper mice, 70
cone snails, 76, 87 elytra, 94 grasshoppers, 15–16, 24,
confused clearwings, escape hatches, 13 25, 29, 35, 39, 58–59,
96–97 evolution, 21 68
copperheads, 90 excitable delmas, 30 grass snakes, 66, 69
corals, 77, 78, 79, 98 exoskeletons, 34, 39, 53 grosbeaks, 70
coral snakes, 86, 99–100 eyed click beetles, 27 ground squirrels, 13
cottonmouth snakes, 85 eyespots, 27, 30–32 groups as defense,
coyotes, 25, 50, 111 113–115
crabs, 20, 34, 40, 111 F
crab spiders, 18 false cobras, 99 H
crickets, 39 fire-bellied toads, 60 hawk-moth caterpillars,
crocodiles, 52 fire salamanders, 60 103
crouch-and-freeze, 13 fireworms, 81 heads, false, 31–32
crow butterflies, 96–97 fish, 30–31, 40–42, 52, heat, self-defense and,
crown-of-thorns sea 62, 79, 81–83, 98–99, 122
stars, 40, 81 114, 120 hedgehogs, 44, 70, 89
crows, 117 fishers, 54 Heliconius butterflies,
crustaceans, 53 flannel moths, 80 101–102
crypsis, 9 flash coloration, 28 hemotoxins, 76
cryptic coloration, fleeing, 22–26 herbivores, 109
14–18, 20 flounder, 19 herding, 113–115
cuttlefish, 19 flying fish, 24 hermit crabs, 20
cyanide, 56–57 foxes, 15 hiding, 10–12
Index 133

hippopotamuses, 110 koppie foam millipedes, 53, 56–57,


hognose snakes, 35, 37 grasshoppers, 58–59 64–65, 70, 72, 99
honeybees, 73–74, 89, kraits, 32 mimic octopuses, 97
120, 122 mimicry, 91–106
hooded pitohui, 61 L mimicry rings, 102
hooded skunks, 65 ladybugs, 59–60, 69 minnows, 120
hooves, 110–111 lanternflies, 32 mobbing, 117
hornbills, 89 leafcutter ants, 121 models, mimicry and,
horned lizards, 18–19, leaf fish, 17 91
42–43, 90 leafy sea dragons, 17 moles, 12
hornet moths, 95 leaves, 10, 17 molting, 34
hornets, 122 lemurs, 119 monarch butterflies, 56,
horns, 111–113 limbs, loss of, 33–35 60, 68, 105–106
hover flies, 91, 94 limpets, 47 mongooses, 70, 89
hyenas, 108 lionfish, 83, 97 monkeys, 119, 123
lizards, 10–11, 18–19, 24, moose, 107–108, 123
I 29–30, 42–43, 86, 99 moray eels, 99
ifritas, 61 lobsters, 34, 37, 40, 111 moths, 16–17, 25, 26,
iguanas, 33 looper caterpillars, 27, 29, 60, 68, 95,
impala, 25 20–21 102–103
ink, squirting of, 37 loris, 88 motion, lack of, 12–14
io moths, 27 lubber grasshoppers, 59, motmots, 89
iron-cross blister 68, 70–72 Müller, Fritz, 93
beetles, 58 lycid beetles, 96, 101 Müllerian mimicry, 92,
93, 100, 101–105
J M musk oxen, 114–115
jellyfish, 77, 78, 79 magpie moths, 60 mussels, 48
jetting, 24 Malaysian hawk moths,
jumping, 8 27 N
jumping spiders, 95–96 mammals, venomous, 87 Navarcostes limnatis, 17
mantids, 16, 27, 39 nematocysts, 77, 79
K mantis shrimp, 25 neurotoxins, 76
kangaroos, 24, 110–111 mantles, 47 newts, 45
katydids, 15–16 masking, 20–21 nocturnal animals, 11
keelbacks, 69 meerkats, 13, 115, 116, northern shrikes, 70, 89
keratin, 46 119 nudibranches, 98
king cobras, 84 Mexican beaded lizards,
king snakes, 90, 86 O
99–100 migrations, 113 octopuses, 19, 24, 28–
kites, 54 milkweed plants, 68 29, 33–34, 37, 87, 97
134 AnimAl deFenses

opossums, 35–37, 59, R shrikes, 70, 89


89 rabbits, 12, 25, 26 skin, 49–52
ostriches, 23–24, 111 raccoons, 11 skinks, 29–30, 32, 33
ovipositors, 75 rats, 33, 46, 100 skunks, 56, 65–66, 70
oxen, 114–115 rattlebox moths, 68 smells, 62–65, 119–120
oystercatchers, 54 rattlesnakes, 84–85, 90, snail kites, 54
oysters, 48 99, 122 snails, 46, 47–48, 76, 87
razor clams, 12 snakes, 32, 35, 37, 53,
P red velvet ants, 75 66, 69–70, 84–86, 89–
pangolins, 51, 53 rhea, 24 90, 99–100, 103–104,
paper wasps, 120 rhinoceroses, 52, 113 122
parrotfish, 79 ring-necked snakes, 32 social insects, 120–121
pheromones, 74, 119– roadrunners, 24 soldier ants, 121
120, 122 sole fish, 97, 98
pill bugs, 53 S solenodons, 88
pill millipedes, 53, saddleback caterpillars, sounds, 26
56–57 79–80 speed, 7–8, 12, 22–24
pincers, 110–111 salamanders, 45, 60 spiders, 18, 25, 34, 40,
pitohui, 61 sawflies, 68 56, 64, 86–87, 95–96
plastron, 46 scales, 49–52 spikes, 39–46
platypuses, 88 scallops, 24 spined spiders, 40
playing dead, 35–37 scorpions, 75–77, 89 spines, 39–46, 78–83
poison dart frogs, 57, scrub jays, 116–117 spiny lobsters, 37, 40
60–61, 69, 70 scutes, 47, 49–52 spiny rats, 33, 46
poisons, 45, 55–69. See sea cucumbers, 34–35 spitting, 68, 84
also venoms sea gulls, 54 spitting cobras, 84
polka-dot boxfish, 62 sea otters, 54 squid, 19
porcupine fish, 41–42 sea slugs, 37, 79 squirrels, 13, 122
porcupines, 43, 54, 100 sea snakes, 97, 98 starfish, 40, 81
potoos, 17–18 sea stars, 40, 54 starlings, 114
pottos, 45 sea urchins, 40, 54, 81, startle displays, 26–30
prairie dogs, 13, 115, 98 stick insects, 29, 35
116 sea wasps, 77 sticklebacks, 41
praying mantis, 39 secondary defenses, 9, stillness, 12–14
primary defenses, 9, 55 55–56 stinging ants, 75
pronghorn antelopes, sharks, 52 stingrays, 80–81
13, 23 shells, 46–49 stings, venomous, 74–77
ptarmigan, 18 shingleback skinks, stink beetles, 105
pursuit deterrence, 64 29–30, 32 stink bugs, 62–63
pythons, 53 shrews, 45, 88 stonefish, 40, 82–83
index 135

stotting, 8, 9 tree frogs, 17, 18, 28 warthogs, 110


surgeonfish, 40 tree snakes, 35 wasps, 74–75, 94–95,
swallowtail butterflies, turtles, 10, 46, 52–54 119–121
27, 63–64, 96–98, tusks, 109–110 water moccasins, 85
104 weasels, 33
V weaver ants, 10
T venoms, 40, 73–90 weeverfish, 81, 98
tail markings, 33 vervet monkeys, 119, wheel spiders, 25
tails, loss of, 33–35 123 willow ptarmigan, 18
tarantulas, 40 vibrations, clams and, 12 wolverines, 54
teeth, 108–110 viceroy butterflies, wolves, 54, 107–108,
tenrecs, 46 105–106 114–115, 123
tentacles, 77–78 vine hawk moths, 27
termites, 121 vomiting, 68–69 Y
thorny devils, 42 vultures, 52–54 yellowjackets, 75, 120
tiger beetles, 96
toadfish, 82 W Z
toads, 60, 70 walkingstick insects, 16, zebras, 108, 111, 114,
tools, 54 63, 67 115
tortoises, 10, 46 warning colors, 58–62, zigzagging, 25–26
towns, 13 86 zorillas, 100
About the Author
christina wilsdon is the author of many nonfiction books for
young readers, as well as articles on natural history for adults. In
her career, she has written regularly for 3-2-1 Contact, Nation-
al Geographic World, Creative Classroom, Reader’s Digest Young
Families, and the Audubon Society. In 1997 Wilsdon received
an EdPress Distinguished Achievement Award for Excellence in
Educational Journalism for an article about a zoo’s composting
program. She currently lives with her family in the Pacific North-
west, where she enjoys bird watching, especially in her garden.

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