60-Second Science

Zebra Stripes Clash with Insect Interest

Biting insects prefer a plain brown hide to the zebra's stripes, implying that the stripes are an anti-insect adaptation. Cynthia Graber reports














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How did the zebra get its stripes? One theory holds that stripes help confuse predators. But stripes might be primarily to protect zebras from ferocious…insects. That’s according to a study in the Journal of Experimental Biology. [Ádám Egri et al., "Polarotactic tabanids find striped patterns with brightness and/or polarization modulation least attractive: an advantage of zebra stripes"]

Horseflies are abundant in Africa. They deliver painful bites that spread disease and distract animals from grazing. The flies use polarized light hitting water as a guide to places to mate and lay eggs. And they read such light hitting dark mammal hides as a sign of a blood meal.

Zebra embryos start out dark and develop their white stripes before birth. Could the stripes confuse flies?

The researchers went to a farm infested with horseflies, where they set up models of black and white stripes of varying angles and widths, thus changing the direction of the reflected polarized light. They tracked how the patterns affected the flies’ interest.

They then tested models of horses colored black, brown, white or zebra-striped. And again tracked the effect on flies.

Turns out that the black and white stripes on a zebra are optimal for avoiding a horsefly’s attention. Meaning that zebras may have evolved stripes to ward off disease-carrying insects, and to dine in peace.

—Cynthia Graber

[The above text is a transcript of this podcast.]


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  1. 1. huttarl 04:27 PM 2/9/12

    Good research! And a good article -- except for the last sentence.

    The research shows a benefit of stripes for zebras. Evolution neither contributed to nor is supported by this result. Morphological characters that serve functional purposes are consistent with evolution, but are even more consistent with intelligent design or creationism.

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  2. 2. huttarl in reply to huttarl 04:29 PM 2/9/12

    Good research! And a good article -- except for the last sentence, "Meaning that zebras may have evolved stripes to..."

    The research shows a benefit of stripes for zebras. Evolutionary theory neither contributed to nor is supported by this result. Morphological characters that serve functional purposes are consistent with evolution, but are even more consistent with intelligent design or creationism.

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  3. 3. huttarl in reply to huttarl 04:30 PM 2/9/12

    Admin: please delete the first of these duplicate posts. The second was an edit.

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  4. 4. abrasileirosilva 04:47 PM 2/9/12

    Very interesting podcast!
    BBC nature shows the picture of the four fake horses used in the research and other picture of the effect of polarized light in a zebra (at page http://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/16944753).

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  5. 5. SteveinOG 05:30 PM 2/9/12

    This may also explain the similar stripes sported on the legs and rump of the okapi, which is a solitary deep forest dweller and thus does not fit the theory that zebra stripes confuse predators by breaking up each animal's outline against the background of a striped herd.

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  6. 6. donlund 01:26 AM 2/12/12

    So if I wear a tee shirt with zebra stripes on it, would this protect me from bug bites??

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