The News Life

Transforming Threat: Witness the Caterpillar’s Astonishing Metamorphosis into a Deadly Snake When Confronted (Video).

January 23, 2024 by Cong Danh

Ladies and gentlemen, the award for best invertebrate mimicry goes to Hemeroplanes triptolemus for its masterful impersonation of a venomous snake!

When Threatened, This Caterpillar Takes On the Appearance of a Venomous  Snake

Native to the rainforests of the Amazon, the snake mimic caterpillar turns into a rather unimpressive moth in the family Sphingidae, but in its larval stage it incorporates an astonishing survival tactic. It needs one too, as without a good defence system in place, sphinx moth caterpillars are essentially energy-rich ‘nom-nuggets’ presented on a bed of leafy greens for the jungle’s predators.

To avoid that fate, the larva of this moth expands and exposes its underside to mimic a snake’s head with black eyes and even light reflections.

You Will Never Guess What This Ecuadorian Creature Actually Is - The  Rainforest Site News

It’s not an easy feat though. The caterpillar begins its defensive manoeuvre by throwing itself backwards and twisting its body to expose hidden shades of yellow, white and black on its underbelly. Then, it sucks in air through tiny holes in its sides (known as spiracles) and pumps them to the front of its body. Once the segments are inflated, the caterpillar is truly transformed, having taken on the form of a venomous snake complete with a diamond-shaped “face” and large, black eyes.

If the “deadly” (and rather costly) costume isn’t enough to deter a predator, such as a lizard or a bird, the caterpillar might also strike like a snake to enhance the effect.

 

 

Although deflection – a tactic involving using eyespots to draw predators’ attention away from the head – is not uncommon among animals, the snake mimic caterpillar’s false face is actually located on the same end as its real one.

“Deflection might not work well for a caterpillar because the caterpillar probably won’t survive if any part of its body gets pierced or ripped off by an attacker,” explains eyespot expert Dr Thomas Hossie. “This defence is all about intimidating or startling an attacker who will run (or fly) away instead of risk a lethal encounter with a snake.”

Interestingly, we also know of a moth that camouflages as a snake in its fully developed stage, and for which the price of this kind of disguise is also rather high energy-wise.

But this guy seems to beat everybody else in the animal kingdom in terms of sporting the best snake costume ever.

 

Filed Under: Animal New

Primary Sidebar

Recent Posts

  • UNBELIEVABLE MOVE: Detroit Tigers Star Tarik Skubal Just Turned Down $45 Million from Mark Zuckerberg — But What He Said Next About America, Inequality, and What Truly Matters in Life Might Be the Most Powerful Thing Baseball Has Heard All Year.nh1
  • BREAKING: SF Giants Are Now at a Tense and Unavoidable Crossroads with Justin Verlander — Why His Next Start Might Be His Last in San Francisco, and the Silent Rift Growing Inside the Clubhouse That No One’s Talking About (Until Now).nh1
  • BREAKING NEWS: Alex Cora has shocked the world and the American media when she accepted Mark Zuckerberg’s $45 million advertising offer to prepare for the launch of a new campaign called “Cora Cares Initiative” to help disadvantaged children in Boston.nh1
  • BREAKING: Red Sox Just Walked Into Wrigley and Silenced the Cubs — What Happened in the Final Inning, the Hug at the Ivy Wall, and the Message from Cora in the Dugout Might Be the Turning Point of the Season.nh1
  • AMAZING NEWS: Aaron Judge Gives Baseball and Hope to Boy Who Survived Ruidoso Wildfire After pouring his heart and soul into Texas, Aaron Judge wasn’t done yet. When the raging fire burned down the town of Ruidoso, New Mexico—taking away homes, forests, and the childhoods of thousands of children—he quietly showed up. Not in a Yankees uniform, but with… a bat, a bracelet, and his eyes fixed on little Liam—a kid who lost both his father and his beloved ballpark overnight..nh1

Recent Comments

  1. A WordPress Commenter on Hello world!

Copyright © 2025 · Paradise on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in