Butterflies are free to change colors : New Study
This image shows a male Bicyclus anynana, prior to the wing color change. Image: Antónia Monteiro
Wed, 08/06/2014
Yale Univ. scientists have chosen the most fleeting of mediums for their groundbreaking work on bio mimicry: They’ve changed the color of butterfly wings.
In so doing, they produced the first structural color change in an
animal by influencing evolution. The discovery may have implications for
physicists and engineers trying to use evolutionary principles in the design of
new materials and devices.
The research appears in the Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences.
“What we did was to imagine a new target color for the wings of a
butterfly, without any knowledge of whether this color was achievable, and
selected for it gradually using populations of live butterflies,” said Antónia
Monteiro, a former professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at Yale, now
at the National Univ. of Singapore.
In this case, Monteiro and her team changed the wing color of the
butterfly Bicyclus anynana from brown to violet. They needed only six
generations of selection.
Little is known about how structural colors in nature evolved,
although researchers have studied such mechanisms extensively in recent years.
Most attempts at biomimicry involve finding a desirable outcome in nature and
simply trying to copy it in the laboratory.
“Today, materials engineers are making complex materials to perform
multiple functions. The parameter space for the design of such materials is
huge, so it is not easy to search for the optimal design,” said Hui Cao, chair
of Yale’s Dept. of Applied Physics, who also worked on the study. “This is why
we can learn from nature, which has obtained the optimal solutions in many
cases via natural evolution over millions of years.”
Indeed, the scientists explained, natural selection algorithms can
select for multiple characteristics simultaneously—which is standard operating
procedure in the natural world.
The desired color for the butterfly wings was achieved by changing
the relative thickness of the wing scales—specifically, those of the lower
lamina. It took less than a year of selective breeding to produce the color
change from brown to violet.
One reason Bicyclus anynana was chosen for the
experiment, Monteiro said, was because it has cousin species that have evolved
violet colors on their wings twice independently. By reproducing such a change
in the lab, the Yale team showed that butterfly populations harbor high levels
of genetic variation regulating scale thickness that lets them react quickly to
new selective conditions.
“We just thought if natural selection has been able to modify wing
colors in members of this genus of butterfly, perhaps so can we,” Monteiro
said.
Source: Yale Univ.
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