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Zebra Stripes May Have Evolved To Deter Bloodsucking Insects

First Posted: 02/ 9/2012 9:37 am Updated: 02/ 9/2012 4:16 pm

By: Charles Choi, LiveScience Contributor
Published: 02/09/2012 08:11 AM EST on LiveScience

Zebra stripes may deter bloodsucking insects, perhaps helping explain why zebras evolved their stripes, researchers say.

Zebras are best known for their dramatic stripes, but why they evolved remains uncertain. One popular notion is that stripes make it difficult for predators to single out an individual zebra from the herd, but experimental evidence for this or other ideas has been lacking.

Scientists investigating horses found that dark-coated individuals attracted far more bloodsucking horseflies than white ones did. Since zebra embryos start out with a dark skin but go on to develop white stripes before birth, the researchers wondered if their striped hides might help make zebras less attractive to the pests. Horseflies, also known as tabanids, not only deliver nasty bites, they also carry dangerous germs.

To see how unappealing zebra stripes might be, the researchers visited a horsefly-infested horse farm near Budapest. Tests with surfaces painted with black and white stripes of varying widths and angles and covered in glue revealed that the narrowest stripes drew the fewest insects, and that real zebra hides closely matched the patterns that were least attractive to tabanids.

The scientists also created all-white, all-black and black-and-white-striped horse models, expecting the striped one would attract a number of flies that was intermediate between the white and dark models. Surprisingly, the horseflies seemed to find the striped model the least appealing of all.

To understand why zebra stripes might have this effect, one can think of all light waves as electric fields rippling either up and down, left and right, or at any angle in between, a property known as polarization. Many insects are drawn to horizontally polarized light because it is a telltale sign of water. Light reflected off water is horizontally polarized; horseflies develop in water or mud, and so are drawn to stretches of water where they can mate and lay eggs. In contrast, the dark and light stripes of zebras each reflect different polarizations of light, and the fact they are arranged vertically might ward off horseflies looking for smooth, horizontally polarized signals, explained researcher Susanne Ă…kesson, an evolutionary ecologist at Lund University in Sweden.

The researchers do not exclude the possibility that zebra stripes might have benefits other than pest control. Still, "we believe that escaping biting flies, which are annoying to their hosts and transmit lethal diseases, would be a very important selection factor, which may have a much stronger effect than the benefits of striped coat patterns suggested previously," Ă…kesson told LiveScience.

The scientists do note that they have not yet performed these experiments in Africa, where the zebras live, but would expect similar results if they did. They also wonder if odors or other molecules from the zebras might attract horseflies, overwhelming any benefit the stripes might have — future models could include such chemicals, Åkesson said.

Ă…kesson, with GĂ¡bor HorvĂ¡th and their colleagues, detailed their findings Feb. 9 in the Journal of Experimental Biology.

Copyright 2012 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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By: Charles Choi, LiveScience Contributor Published: 02/09/2012 08:11 AM EST on LiveScience Zebra stripes may deter bloodsucking insects, perhaps helping explain why zebras evolved their stripes...
By: Charles Choi, LiveScience Contributor Published: 02/09/2012 08:11 AM EST on LiveScience Zebra stripes may deter bloodsucking insects, perhaps helping explain why zebras evolved their stripes...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gerorem
Linus v. Lucy
08:42 PM on 02/11/2012
Alright, science minds: If stripes keep the zebras from being pestered, how do you explain referee uniforms? They really get the stings! And how do convicts keep from getting zapped?
07:10 AM on 02/12/2012
Convicts have horisontal stripes don't they?

We could do a control test on referees, take the uniform off of half of them and see who gets the most stings.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gerorem
Linus v. Lucy
09:51 AM on 02/12/2012
Nah. They would be ejected from the stadium for streaking.
06:59 PM on 02/10/2012
The writer makes a fundamental error when mistake.

Evolution is not deterministic!

Hence the statement ---"Zebra stripes may deter bloodsucking insects, perhaps helping explain WHY [my emphasis ] zebras evolved their stripes, researchers say." is completely off the mark.

Evolution has no purpose. hence there is no reason "why" they appeared.

They were a result of random mutation and natural selection [i.e. survival]

The fact that stripes may have contributed to the specie's survival or in some other way are beneficial has absolutely nothing to do with their having appeared.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
CabinAgue
We are ALL in this together.
08:23 PM on 02/11/2012
Not with they they appeared, no, but the benefit is the reason they would be naturally selected.

The language is always messy.  As you say evolution has no purpose -- because it has no consciousness, it is a process, not an entity.  But it does explain results, and in our language, we would say that is "why" zebras evolved to have stripes (which, they certainly did).
07:50 AM on 02/12/2012
Language can be messy but reporters who presume to report science out to be sufficiently conversant about the subject and sufficiently the wordsmith so's not to distort a fundamental scientific theory.

Indeed, since there is nothing deterministic to "explain" evolution explains nothing.

The fact that a mutation may change an organism is not an explanation but merely an observable result of the process.

Sloppy language is nowhere helpful, particularly in science.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gerorem
Linus v. Lucy
08:28 PM on 02/11/2012
True, creatures don't "vote" on what characteristics they want to develop.

But it is not entirely "luck" that dark skin, an asset in equatorial areas, became light skin, an asset in northern climate. Or that the striped zebras worked a lot better than the checkered ones, the paisley ones, the......

Natural "selection" is an odd term, I always thought--like things in nature got to shop for what they want. Or Mother Nature picked out the outfits.

It's more than dumb luck. Maybe something like smart luck.
07:58 AM on 02/12/2012
I disagree. Your statement "smart" luck implies determinism of some kind.

Evolution is, to put it in the vernacular" pure luck. An organism either survives its environment or it doesn't. A white animal is more likely to survive in an arctic environment than a black.

However the original attribute of whiteness was random. The survival of, say the polar bear, was merely a function of natural selection, [ i.e., survival ] which may or may not have been determined solely by it's whiteness.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
karen lyons kalmenson
i poem/paint, sometimes, i ain't
04:42 PM on 02/10/2012
the magic of it all makes it all worthwhile♥♥♥
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gerorem
Linus v. Lucy
08:32 PM on 02/11/2012
Like your motto: "I am, what is your excuse."

At my age, the motto is: "I think, therefore....[oh dammit, what was I going to say?]...Oh yes--I am."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
karen lyons kalmenson
i poem/paint, sometimes, i ain't
06:36 AM on 02/12/2012
perhaps i could change mine to i drink, there i am☻
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Blodo
Time to build a better world
04:40 PM on 02/10/2012
The idea about light polarization is consistent with my personal experience. I've wondered in the past why horseflies seemed especially attracted to people who were in a lake or just emerging from a lake. The light reflecting off the water droplets would have the type of polarization they find attractive. At any rate, it is a testable hypothesis. I'm sure some eager bio graduate student will do the work to either confirm or refute it.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
J0E1
Phil Hill 2012
04:04 PM on 02/10/2012
I heard the white horses got frisky with the black horses on Noah's ark.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gerorem
Linus v. Lucy
08:36 PM on 02/11/2012
No...ah...There was segregation back then. The white horses sat in the back.
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Ossit
Ossit
11:00 AM on 02/10/2012
A documentary said the stripes were a way to confuse predators. Running in a group it's a lot more difficult to tell individual animals. I don't think it has anything to do with pest control. I do know that some insects see flowers in another way with light that we can't see. I'm sure the zebra is going to get bitten no matter what their stripes are to insects. When I first heard a zebra I couldn't help but laugh. They sound like donkeys.
04:49 PM on 02/10/2012
Insects see into the ultraviolet. Most flowers look a lot different when make ultraviolet visible.
Zebras are more closely related to donkeys than they are to horses.
07:02 PM on 02/10/2012
"One popular notion is that stripes make it difficult for predators to single out an individual zebra from the herd, but experimental evidence for this or other ideas has been lacking."

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/02/09/zebra-stripes-may-have-evolved-to-deter-bloodsucking-insects_n_1265160.html?ref=science
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GaryNOVA
Fear My Micro-bio!!!!!!!!
05:04 AM on 02/10/2012
Prison.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gerorem
Linus v. Lucy
08:38 PM on 02/11/2012
That's it! Stripes make the zebras easier to spot if they break out.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
08:36 PM on 02/09/2012
Very interesting information. Horse owners have always struggled with ways to defeat the flyingmenaces that torment our equine friends. Providing a lightweight summersheet with dark stripes for grays and ones with white stripes for darker horses could provide some relief.
11:04 AM on 02/10/2012
Patent it.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
12:47 PM on 02/10/2012
Absolutely! I can produce zebraprintsforequines. Hey! No reason it couldn't work for 4-H kids showing livestock! Thanks, eric.
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stjoshy
"C is for COOKIEEEEE. thats good enough for me"
08:16 PM on 02/09/2012
as an open minded creationist i see this as plausible.. or maybe they were made that way in the first place. who knows definitively?.. not anyone who responds to this thread, thats for sure
TomMartin
Freedom and equality.
06:57 AM on 02/10/2012
If they were created like that, then their babies would have been striped too. But the babies are dark, so it is evidence of evolution. Maybe millions of years from now we will see a mutation with babies striped too, and this mutation will be very beneficial.
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stjoshy
"C is for COOKIEEEEE. thats good enough for me"
07:12 AM on 02/10/2012
says who? the babies are dark but they end up being striped. i have the perfect anecdote to POSSIBLY refute if not bring doubt to your theory. i am half white half european and mexican. when i was born i came out red. i looked native american my family said.. minus the sun i look like your average whiteboy. the point is, the way a baby looks on the inside of the womb differs from the way they look on the outside. i guess you could equate it to an orange ripening or a tomato reaching delicious eatability. im not saying this isnt a case of evolution outright. but there is the posibility that the creator made the animal this way and we are jus tripping out on his amazingness. i dont like how in the first two paragraphs the author clearly paints an evolutionist bias, as if everyone who reads this believes in every evolution theory. i believe we were created by a higher intelligence. i believe animals and humans evolved to stay viable to earths changes. write your story without personal bias if you want respect
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
03:33 PM on 02/10/2012
From a religious perspective, breedin' does start mighty early.
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Blodo
Time to build a better world
04:40 PM on 02/10/2012
Nope, but we know how to find out. And therein lies all the difference in the world.
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stjoshy
"C is for COOKIEEEEE. thats good enough for me"
05:31 PM on 02/10/2012
that made absolutely no sense. and you dont know it all as much as you would like to proclaim by the way
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
keith w oliver
a dingo ate my micro-bio!!! >:O
07:49 PM on 02/09/2012
so if i dress up as a referee, then biting flies won't try as hard to eat me?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Gas-Bag
It's nice to be nice to the nice
08:02 PM on 02/09/2012
Yes, but don't go anywhere near a soccer stadium.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
onionboy
Blessed are the Cheese Makers
06:22 PM on 02/09/2012
That's actually very cool.

Now, if someone can figure out the mouse/elephant thing. I saw them do the experiments on MythBusters. If I'd had the chance to bet, I would have bet everything I owned that an African elephant wouldn't give a crap about a mouse...except maybe to step on it. But there it was, clear as day. The elephant definitely took steps to avoid a (fake) mouse, and specifically the mouse. I cannot even come up with a hypothesis of why to even test for.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Gas-Bag
It's nice to be nice to the nice
08:05 PM on 02/09/2012
Mice are buggers to get out from between their toes, that's my theory:-)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fran Jaime
Yo Soy 132!
10:09 PM on 02/13/2012
They're tougher to get off than gum!
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Sunwyn Ravenwood
Farewell my friends, time to go...
03:05 PM on 02/10/2012
I have two ideas. One is that mice resemble some burrowing rodent that makes tunnels under the ground. Elephants would be wary of anything that creates unsafe walking conditions. With their weight if one leg suddenly sank into the ground it would be difficult to get free.

The other idea is that elephants have trouble seeing something as small as a mouse, and that since Mythbusters used white mice, the elephants saw something unfamiliar, a small white bob moving around, and backed off because she didn't know what it was.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
onionboy
Blessed are the Cheese Makers
03:43 PM on 02/10/2012
#1 is more likely. It at least has some natural selection factor to it. Although, I don't know of the burrowing risk with mice as compared to some of the larger burrowers. But it's possible.

#2 I highly doubt. My recollection is that they did some non-mouse but mouse-sized controls. It didn't have the same effect.
04:15 PM on 02/09/2012
Biology is a most fascinating field - made ever so by Charles Darwin who shared a birth year and birth month and birth day with Abraham Lincoln on February 12, 1809. There is a humorous tale about Tarzan and zebras. One day as Tarzan was swinging on a vine with a bucket of tar and a paint brush he came across a herd of white horses. So one can understand about how the stripes got on the white horses. But the music playing in the background was most unusual. It was "Tarzan Stripes Forever." Well, forget about the humor and think more about the Century we are in - it belongs to Biology. We are witnessing great accomplishments in molecular biology - a tough field to master - requires considerable understanding of organic chemistry - but one with great opportunity. In 2001 the number of doctoral degrees awarded in the USA had declined in all areas but two: computer science and the biological sciences. With the passing of ACA the growth of biology programs will take place, expansion of research in biology will occur, more colleges will want to have electron microscopes, and challenging jobs will open up to those who pursue graduate studies in biology. Some say that doing so is not in the best of America's interests - that spending money to deal with disease and better managing it is a waste of valuable resources. But that is the politics of the 2012 election.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tulane-grad
master-debater
04:15 PM on 02/09/2012
I'm guessing the leftist zebras envied the conservative zebras coats and demanded half their hair.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bahkey
05:29 PM on 02/09/2012
High % of conservative zebras are old and hairless.
Plus easier to run down to be eaten by the young progressive left lioneses
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ngonyama
Major prolation, perfect mode
10:22 AM on 02/10/2012
You give me evolutionary hope for our society. May the fittest survive.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bring in swat
04:15 PM on 02/09/2012
baby j3sus colored the white ponies for his future second coming with a sharpie.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
we-r-stardust
Time flies like an arrow Fruit flies like a banana
04:00 PM on 02/09/2012
Yipes, stripes, Beech Nut’s got ‘em