I enjoyed it. It reminded me of butterfly mimicry between Monarch and Viceroy butterflies:I'd wager that it's an innate/instinctual understanding. Bear with me, I'm spouting a lot of this off from memory, and it's late at night so it might be a little clunky/ineloquent. The "I sting! Don't eat me!" black and yellow stripes is (from what I understand) a pretty much cosmopolitan form of Müllerian mimicry, which is where multiple organisms with similar defenses evolve similar aposematic traits. Aposematism allows potential predators to develop, through learning (short term) and evolution (long term), an aversion to an unpalatable/dangerous potential prey animal. Müllerian mimicry strengthens this association further, because if many different stinging insects use the same signals to advertise their stinginess, then predators only have to form that association once to automatically avoid all those insects. This benefits all species involved, since most predators don't like being stung and most insects don't like being eaten. In the wild, red junglefowl encounter multiple yellow-and-black striped wasps and hornets, and even have significant range overlap with several members of the genus Apis, including the very cool (and notoriously defensive) Apis dorsata. So while they wouldn't naturally encounter Apis mellifera (the Western honey bee) it wouldn't surprise me at all if it fits the chickens' inbuilt schema of "bee."
Sorry if this was too long winded, it's just a topic I really love. I'd have been an evolutionary biologist if I didn't love field work so much.
https://njaudubon.org/monarchs-and-viceroys-a-tale-of-mimicry/
. The "I sting! Don't eat me!" black and yellow stripes is (from what I understand) a pretty much cosmopolitan form of Müllerian mimicry, which is where multiple organisms with similar defenses evolve similar aposematic traits. Aposematism allows potential predators to develop, through learning (short term) and evolution (long term), an aversion to an unpalatable/dangerous potential prey animal. Müllerian mimicry strengthens this association further, because if many different stinging insects use the same signals to advertise their stinginess, then predators only have to form that association once to automatically avoid all those insects. This benefits all species involved, since most predators don't like being stung and most insects don't like being eaten. In the wild, red junglefowl encounter multiple yellow-and-black striped wasps and hornets, and even have significant range overlap with several members of the genus Apis, including the very cool (and notoriously defensive) Apis dorsata. So while they wouldn't naturally encounter Apis mellifera (the Western honey bee) it wouldn't surprise me at all if it fits the chickens' inbuilt schema of "bee."
, it's just a topic I really love. I'd have been an evolutionary biologist if I didn't love field work so much.
(there was liver and some other leftovers in there too, to be fair)
