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It`s Okay To Be Smart, This Rainforest Caterpillar Looks Like Donald Trump

This Rainforest Caterpillar Looks Like Donald Trump

One of nature's best tricks for avoiding predators is to not be seen at all.

But some creatures use a different strategy.

They advertise their presence.

[MUSIC]

This is a Megalopygid caterpillar.

We found this one while we were exploring the Peruvian Amazon.

This family of moths has a few common names, but their resemblance to a certain politician's

famous fluff has earned them a special nickname: Donald Trump caterpillars.

The Donald Trump caterpillar loves attention, it wants to get noticed.

It's a confusing strategy: If you don't want to get eaten, why advertise yourself?

Those hairs might look cute and cuddly, but they're disguising irritating, venomous

spines.

Touch it… or eat one… and you're gunna have a bad time.

This caterpillar's showy appearance delivers a clear message to other animals: STAY AWAY.

It's what biologists call an aposematic signal, and nature's full of them.

Like this, or this, or these.

The caterpillar's warning signal works so well that another rainforest resident has

evolved to mimic it.

No, not another caterpillar.

That baby bird.

This cinereous mourner chick will grow up to wear ordinary gray, but the baby looks

more like… carrot-flavored cotton candy?

Predators mistake that orange fuzz for the Trump caterpillar, so they stay away.

It's a detailed disguise too, even the tips of the feather barbs are colored to mimic

those irritating hairs.

But it gets better.

When scientists watched the nest, the bird even moved like a caterpillar when startled.

Mimicry is so useful in fact that some species use it to disguise more than just their own bodies

I'm going to let our rainforest host Aaron explain:

So this is kind of weird, we were hiking in the jungle the other night

and we came across this weird yellow structure on the bottom of this leaf

and at first I thought this was the so-called Donald Trump caterpillar

but this is not one of those caterpillars, it looks a lot like it I think

but this appears to be some sort of egg case, I don't know I've never heard about

an egg case mimicking a venomous caterpillar like this.

But it would make sense, that would be a good way to ward off potential predators

So let's find out, that would be really cool.

Nature plays with a bunch of di fferent copycat strategies, but a harmless species copying

the warning signals of a harmful one is called Batesian mimicry, named after Henry Walter

Bates, an English naturalist who studied alongside Alfred Russel Wallace and Charles Darwin.

Bates loved butterflies, and they're masters of the mimicry that bears his name.

The North American pipevine swallowtail is so toxic that at least six other species of

butterflies and moths wear its disguise.

And instead of one species mimicking another, female African swallowtails mimic more than

a dozen other butterflies, depending on what the local toxic species happens to be, almost

as if they have genetic GPS!

Lucky for this guy, mantises will hunt just about any bug but ants. … except, this isn't

an ant.

It's one of a whole class of ant-mimicking spiders that dress as insects to get protection…

Several caterpillars wear snake heads on their bodies… and this moth even wears a pair

on its wings.

Birds are their main predators, and most birds, either instinctively or by learning from others,

will avoid the danger noodles.

The stripes of a venomous coral snake tells birds “we're off the menu” and that

pattern delivers such a clear message that 1 in 5 New World snake species mimic those

stripes for their own safety.

But they don't get the stripes quite right.

But in mimicry, disguises don't have to be perfect.

They just have to be good enough.

If birds knew the rhyme…

Narrated: “Red and yellow kill a fellow, red and black, venom lack”

…they wouldn't get fooled.

Until they met this venomous South American coral snake.

Nature is full of exceptions, and mimicry is always being refined by evolution.

If you're facing the choice between having dinner and being dinner, it's best to be

cautious rather than confident.

In nature, how something looks can be its making or unmaking.

Scientists like Bates and Darwin knew that mimicry proved the power of natural selection,

even though they didn't understand how an unguided process could copy patterns between

such distantly related species.

Today, more than a century later, scientists are finally unraveling the genetics that draw

these copycats.

So be careful out there.

If it's begging to be noticed, maybe it's best to stay away.

Stay curious.

Did you enjoy all that awesome close-up footage of the Donald Trump caterpillar?

That's from our friends at Deep Look, you might remember them from our video on slime

molds.

They joined us in Peru, so make sure you're subscribed to Deep Look so you can see what

awesome sights they brought back from the rainforest

This Rainforest Caterpillar Looks Like Donald Trump Diese Regenwald-Raupe sieht aus wie Donald Trump Esta oruga de la selva tropical se parece a Donald Trump Cette chenille de la forêt tropicale ressemble à Donald Trump Questo bruco della foresta pluviale assomiglia a Donald Trump この熱帯雨林の青虫はドナルド・トランプに似ている Deze regenwoudrups lijkt op Donald Trump Ta gąsienica z lasu deszczowego wygląda jak Donald Trump Esta lagarta da floresta tropical parece-se com Donald Trump Эта гусеница из тропического леса похожа на Дональда Трампа Bu Yağmur Ormanı Tırtılı Donald Trump'a Benziyor Ця гусінь з тропічних лісів схожа на Дональда Трампа 这只雨林毛毛虫看起来像唐纳德·特朗普 這只雨林毛毛蟲看起來像唐納德·特朗普

One of nature's best tricks for avoiding predators is to not be seen at all.

But some creatures use a different strategy.

They advertise their presence.

[MUSIC]

This is a Megalopygid caterpillar. Dit is een Megalopygid-rups.

We found this one while we were exploring the Peruvian Amazon.

This family of moths has a few common names, but their resemblance to a certain politician's

famous fluff has earned them a special nickname: Donald Trump caterpillars.

The Donald Trump caterpillar loves attention, it wants to get noticed.

It's a confusing strategy: If you don't want to get eaten, why advertise yourself?

Those hairs might look cute and cuddly, but they're disguising irritating, venomous Ці волосинки можуть виглядати мило і приємно, але вони маскують дратівливі, отруйні

spines.

Touch it… or eat one… and you're gunna have a bad time.

This caterpillar's showy appearance delivers a clear message to other animals: STAY AWAY.

It's what biologists call an aposematic signal, and nature's full of them.

Like this, or this, or these.

The caterpillar's warning signal works so well that another rainforest resident has

evolved to mimic it.

No, not another caterpillar.

That baby bird.

This cinereous mourner chick will grow up to wear ordinary gray, but the baby looks Dit asgrauwe rouwende kuiken zal opgroeien om gewoon grijs te dragen, maar de baby ziet eruit

more like… carrot-flavored cotton candy?

Predators mistake that orange fuzz for the Trump caterpillar, so they stay away.

It's a detailed disguise too, even the tips of the feather barbs are colored to mimic

those irritating hairs.

But it gets better.

When scientists watched the nest, the bird even moved like a caterpillar when startled.

Mimicry is so useful in fact that some species use it to disguise more than just their own bodies

I'm going to let our rainforest host Aaron explain:

So this is kind of weird, we were hiking in the jungle the other night

and we came across this weird yellow structure on the bottom of this leaf

and at first I thought this was the so-called Donald Trump caterpillar

but this is not one of those caterpillars, it looks a lot like it I think

but this appears to be some sort of egg case, I don't know I've never heard about

an egg case mimicking a venomous caterpillar like this.

But it would make sense, that would be a good way to ward off potential predators

So let's find out, that would be really cool.

Nature plays with a bunch of di fferent copycat strategies, but a harmless species copying

the warning signals of a harmful one is called Batesian mimicry, named after Henry Walter de waarschuwingssignalen van een schadelijke wordt Batesiaanse mimicry genoemd, genoemd naar Henry Walter

Bates, an English naturalist who studied alongside Alfred Russel Wallace and Charles Darwin.

Bates loved butterflies, and they're masters of the mimicry that bears his name.

The North American pipevine swallowtail is so toxic that at least six other species of De Noord-Amerikaanse pipevine-zwaluwstaart is zo giftig dat ten minste zes andere soorten

butterflies and moths wear its disguise.

And instead of one species mimicking another, female African swallowtails mimic more than

a dozen other butterflies, depending on what the local toxic species happens to be, almost

as if they have genetic GPS!

Lucky for this guy, mantises will hunt just about any bug but ants. … except, this isn't

an ant.

It's one of a whole class of ant-mimicking spiders that dress as insects to get protection…

Several caterpillars wear snake heads on their bodies… and this moth even wears a pair

on its wings.

Birds are their main predators, and most birds, either instinctively or by learning from others,

will avoid the danger noodles.

The stripes of a venomous coral snake tells birds “we're off the menu” and that De strepen van een giftige koraalslang vertellen vogels "we zijn van het menu" en dat

pattern delivers such a clear message that 1 in 5 New World snake species mimic those

stripes for their own safety.

But they don't get the stripes quite right.

But in mimicry, disguises don't have to be perfect.

They just have to be good enough.

If birds knew the rhyme…

Narrated: “Red and yellow kill a fellow, red and black, venom lack”

…they wouldn't get fooled.

Until they met this venomous South American coral snake.

Nature is full of exceptions, and mimicry is always being refined by evolution.

If you're facing the choice between having dinner and being dinner, it's best to be

cautious rather than confident.

In nature, how something looks can be its making or unmaking. In de natuur kan hoe iets eruitziet het maken of het afbreken ervan zijn.

Scientists like Bates and Darwin knew that mimicry proved the power of natural selection,

even though they didn't understand how an unguided process could copy patterns between

such distantly related species.

Today, more than a century later, scientists are finally unraveling the genetics that draw

these copycats.

So be careful out there.

If it's begging to be noticed, maybe it's best to stay away.

Stay curious.

Did you enjoy all that awesome close-up footage of the Donald Trump caterpillar?

That's from our friends at Deep Look, you might remember them from our video on slime

molds.

They joined us in Peru, so make sure you're subscribed to Deep Look so you can see what

awesome sights they brought back from the rainforest