Acoustic mimicry in bat prey and burrowing owls (expand)
Comparisons
Other forms of mimicry Pasteur (1982) named after Bates
Compare with Mertensian mimicry (very similar)
Cases where the model is not a 'sister' prey organism of a common predator, but the predator's predator (quite a different situation, though commonly called Batesian mimicry as well).
Evolution
Palatable models: DO Gibson (1974) Batesian mimicry without distastefulness Nature and GD Ruxton, M Speed, TN Sherratt 2004 Evasive mimicry: when (if ever) could mimicry based on difficulty of capture evolve? Proceedings: Biological Sciences
"Experiments have shown that squirrels that are sympatric (live together) with such owls are more cautious than other populations.[8]"
Does not make sense. Why would the squirrels become more cautious in an environment that contains a batesian mimic of its predator? They would become less cautious since chances are the hissing sound is not from a snake.—Preceding unsigned comment added by User:128.189.229.166 (talk • contribs) on 01:08, 21 April 2008
You're almost certainly right here, thanks for pointing this out. The only other possibility is that the mimicry evolved because they are so cautious. I still haven't got round to reading the whole paper (and thus the slow progress of this article of late), but I'll have to check up on this. Richard001 (talk) 01:41, 21 April 2008 (UTC)