Further observation of the nest has revealed that the women’s Humangbird has increased his hatching caterpillar clumps, lined up with the visible material with the seeds of the balsa tree. The researchers also saw that whenever they approached the film from the nest, the girl would take her head upwards and she would start to shake her shore while her wings were standing at the end. He was trying to see himself threatening.
When the research team supported, the Hamangbird girl returned to her nest. He wondered if he treated the original hunters like this, but eventually he was known to hunt a young man near a nest. The girl showed the same treatment to humans, who succeeded in intimidating the heat.
Falak vowed that the wings, colors and heads were similar to the megalopadedi and storundi families like insect larvae, which are also local to the region. They may not be the image of a particular mirror, but they look so close that the hunters will consider themselves warning.
“When humans and a hunter are treated with a white neck jackbin through a script, it resembles sudden ‘throwing’ or ‘shock’, in which many caterpilrs were displayed in response to anxiety, including the bird found in the residence found,” they include. Said About the same study.
… Now you don’t
Could there be an alternative explanation for this Hamangbird Casapping as a caterpillar? May be. Researchers believe that it is possible that the long wings that appear to imitate the spinal cord may be developed as a form of crosis, or a rash that helps a organism mix in its background. The contents of the Bilsa trees that resemble the wings clearly helped it.