The itsy-bitsy spider was all like "Mmmm. That looks yummy! I'm gonna ea-- OHMYGODLOLOLOZPLEASEDON'THURTME!!!"
Identifying traits that constitute adaptations has been a challenge for evolutionary biologists for over 150 years. In recent memory, many biologists developed a habit of indiscriminately labeling virtually all traits as adaptations, often justifying the label with speculative "just-so stories" of adaptive utility. This practice has been especially common in putative cases of Batesian mimicry, where even slight similarities of harmless organisms to dangerous organisms are assumed to be adaptive resemblances. Greene et al. devised a simple but elegant experiment to test the hypothesis that a tephritid fly, Zonosemata vittigera, mimics the territorial displays of jumping spiders with its marked wings and elaborate wing display. By replacing Z. vittigera wings with House Fly (Musca domestica) wings and vice versa, the team confirmed that both the wing waving behavior and the marked wings are necessary to deter predation by jumping spiders.
(Note: the video is of a different putative jumping spider mimic, Delphinia picta. Courtesy of Ian Dworkin)
A similar study in Snowberry Flies
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