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科学美国人60秒:蜥蜴身上的条纹可以让捕食者混淆时间

来源:可可英语 编辑:aimee   可可英语APP下载 |  可可官方微信:ikekenet
  
  • This is Scientific American — 60-Second Science. I'm Karen Hopkin.
  • 这里是科学美国人——60秒科学。我是凯伦·霍普金。
  • Got a minute?
  • 有一分钟时间吗?
  • They say that wearing stripes can make you look thinner.
  • 有人说,穿条纹装会让你看上去显瘦。
  • Well, lizards don't care about looking svelte.
  • 虽然蜥蜴并不在乎看起来苗条这件事。
  • But their stripes might help them avoid getting caught by a hungry predator—and not by camouflage.
  • 不过它们身上的条纹可以帮助它们避免被饥饿的食肉动物抓住,它们并不是因为伪装才避免被抓的。
  • No, it may be that the stripes make them look like they're moving slower than they really are,
  • 实际上,因为它们身上的条纹让它们的速度看起来比实际上要慢,
  • messing up the predators' timing.
  • 导致食肉动物混淆了时间。
  • That's according to a report in the journal Royal Society Open Science.
  • 这份报告刊登在《皇家社会开放科学》。
  • Gopal Murali at the Indian Institute of Science Education Research got interested in the question of why so many lizards sport stripes
  • 令印度科学教育研究所的高伯·穆拉里感兴趣的是,为什么大多数蜥蜴会显示出条纹,
  • while perusing hundreds of images of the conspicuously decorated critters.
  • 它为此研究了数百张蜥蜴伪装自己的图片。
  • "Surprisingly when we looked into the literature
  • “令人惊讶的是,我们在研究资料时,
  • we did not find any direct experimental evidence for the role of striped coloration in lizards."
  • 并没有发现有任何直接的实验证据能证明蜥蜴身上条纹颜色的作用。”
  • Seems such eye-catching coloration would make the bearers easier for predators to spot in the wild.
  • 看起来这种吸引眼球的颜色会使捕食者更容易在野外发现蜥蜴。
  • So Murali wondered whether bright stripes might create a sort of optical illusion,
  • 所以穆拉里想知道,鲜艳的条纹颜色是否会引起视觉幻象,
  • one that would disorient predators and maybe get them to grab a lizard's tail rather than a more vital body part.
  • 误导捕食者,让它们抓住蜥蜴的尾巴而不是蜥蜴更重要的身体部分。
  • "Since it is well known that the tail of lizards can be easily lost
  • “众所周知,蜥蜴的尾巴可以轻易断掉,
  • and most of the predators are known to attack the head or body of lizards,
  • 大多数捕食者都知道要袭击蜥蜴的头部或身体,
  • we thought that the purpose of contrasting stripes on the body of lizards in motion might actually trick predators
  • 我们认为蜥蜴让身上出现对比鲜明的条纹的目的是让捕食者产生错觉,
  • to attack the tail which doesn't cost much for the lizards when its life is at risk."
  • 去袭击蜥蜴的尾巴,当蜥蜴的生命面临危险时,断掉尾巴对它来说并不算什么。”
  • But does such stripy subterfuge really work that way?
  • 但是这种条纹手段真的有用吗?
  • To test the idea, Murali could not change the colors of actual animals
  • 虽然想验证这一想法,但是穆拉里不能通过改变真实动物的颜色,
  • to see whether racing stripes can really save a lizard's hide, more so than solid colors or random blotches.
  • 来观察相比于单一的颜色和任意的斑点,条纹是否更能保护蜥蜴的伪装。
  • And he knew he couldn't convince live predators to try to capture fake lizard models.
  • 他知道他不能说服捕食者去捕食假的蜥蜴模型。
  • So he did the next best thing.
  • 所以他做了下面这件伟大的事。
  • "We carried out the experiment using humans as surrogate predators
  • “我们让人类作为替代捕食者进行了实验,
  • and asked them to play a game on a touch screen where they attack the virtual lizards with different color patterns."
  • 我们让人们在触摸屏上玩了个游戏,他们要去袭击有不同颜色图案的虚拟蜥蜴。”
  • Murali had more than 150 volunteers lunge for rectangular prey on a touch screen.
  • 穆拉里让150余名志愿者在触摸屏上猛扑长方形的猎物。
  • He suggested that they aim for the "head"…the region at the front of the rectangle based on which way it was moving.
  • 他让志愿者以猎物的头为目标,以猎物移动方向的前方区域为目标。
  • Some rectangles had stripes along their fronts. Others had spots or had stripy bottoms.
  • 一些长方形前部有条纹。其他则是斑点或尾部有条纹。
  • Turns out the volunteer predators had a tougher time catching the virtual prey that was striped on top than any of the other variations.
  • 结果是,与其他变化相比,志愿捕食者更难抓到顶部有条纹的虚拟猎物。
  • And when the hunters made any contact it tended to be at the tail.
  • 当捕食者试图接触时,抓住的总是猎物的尾巴。
  • Because, Murali determined, the effect of the stripes was to make the lizards appear slower than they actually were.
  • 穆拉里认为,这是因为条纹产生的影响会让蜥蜴的速度看起来比实际上要慢。
  • "The findings are analogous to the striped pattern being a force field
  • “这一结果相当于,条纹图案是一种力场,
  • which prevents predators from attacking the most important body parts and hence redirecting the attacks to the tail."
  • 可以阻止捕食者袭击蜥蜴身体上的重要部位,而是让捕食者去袭击蜥蜴的尾巴。”
  • Leaving more lizards alive, to flee another day.
  • 让更多的蜥蜴活下去,让它们再逃一天吧。
  • Thanks for listening Scientific American — 60-Second Science Science. I'm Karen Hopkin.
  • 谢谢大家收听科学美国人——60秒科学。我是凯伦·霍普金。


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This is Scientific American — 60-Second Science. I'm Karen Hopkin.
Got a minute?
They say that wearing stripes can make you look thinner. Well, lizards don't care about looking svelte. But their stripes might help them avoid getting caught by a hungry predator—and not by camouflage. No, it may be that the stripes make them look like they're moving slower than they really are, messing up the predators' timing. That's according to a report in the journal Royal Society Open Science.
Gopal Murali at the Indian Institute of Science Education Research got interested in the question of why so many lizards sport stripes while perusing hundreds of images of the conspicuously decorated critters.
"Surprisingly when we looked into the literature we did not find any direct experimental evidence for the role of striped coloration in lizards."
Seems such eye-catching coloration would make the bearers easier for predators to spot in the wild. So Murali wondered whether bright stripes might create a sort of optical illusion, one that would disorient predators and maybe get them to grab a lizard's tail rather than a more vital body part.
"Since it is well known that the tail of lizards can be easily lost and most of the predators are known to attack the head or body of lizards, we thought that the purpose of contrasting stripes on the body of lizards in motion might actually trick predators to attack the tail which doesn't cost much for the lizards when its life is at risk."

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蜥蜴条纹.jpg

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But does such stripy subterfuge really work that way? To test the idea, Murali could not change the colors of actual animals to see whether racing stripes can really save a lizard's hide, more so than solid colors or random blotches. And he knew he couldn't convince live predators to try to capture fake lizard models. So he did the next best thing.
"We carried out the experiment using humans as surrogate predators and asked them to play a game on a touch screen where they attack the virtual lizards with different color patterns."
Murali had more than 150 volunteers lunge for rectangular prey on a touch screen. He suggested that they aim for the “head”…the region at the front of the rectangle based on which way it was moving. Some rectangles had stripes along their fronts. Others had spots or had stripy bottoms.
Turns out the volunteer predators had a tougher time catching the virtual prey that was striped on top than any of the other variations. And when the hunters made any contact it tended to be at the tail. Because, Murali determined, the effect of the stripes was to make the lizards appear slower than they actually were.
"The findings are analogous to the striped pattern being a force field which prevents predators from attacking the most important body parts and hence redirecting the attacks to the tail."
Leaving more lizards alive, to flee another day.
Thanks for listening Scientific American — 60-Second Science Science. I'm Karen Hopkin.

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重点单词   查看全部解释    
institute ['institju:t]

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n. 学会,学院,协会
vt. 创立,开始,制

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analogous [ə'næləgəs]

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adj. 类似的

 
complex ['kɔmpleks]

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adj. 复杂的,复合的,合成的
n. 复合体

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pattern ['pætən]

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n. 图案,式样,典范,模式,型
v. 以图案

 
predator ['predətə]

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n. 食肉动物,掠夺者

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rectangle ['rektæŋgl]

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n. 长方形,矩形

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coloration [,kʌlə'reiʃən]

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n. 染色;着色

 
determined [di'tə:mind]

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adj. 坚毅的,下定决心的

 
camouflage ['kæmuflɑ:ʒ]

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n. 伪装,掩饰,迷彩服 v. 伪装,欺瞒

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convince [kən'vins]

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vt. 使确信,使信服,说服

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