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- Path: sparky!uunet!noc.near.net!nic.umass.edu!m2c!jjmhome!smds!rh
- From: rh@smds.com (Richard Harter)
- Newsgroups: sci.bio
- Subject: Re: why (evolutionarily) are zebras striped?
- Message-ID: <1993Jan3.062417.27240@smds.com>
- Date: 3 Jan 93 06:24:17 GMT
- References: <1992Dec31.204015.18922@husc3.harvard.edu> <crystal.725914988@glia> <1JAN199320283193@utkvx3.utk.edu> <1993Jan02.022917.16636@watson.ibm.com>
- Reply-To: rh@ishmael.UUCP (Richard Harter)
- Distribution: usa
- Organization: Software Maintenance & Development Systems, Inc.
- Lines: 19
-
- In article <1993Jan02.022917.16636@watson.ibm.com> andrewt@watson.ibm.com (Andrew Taylor) writes:
- >In article <1JAN199320283193@utkvx3.utk.edu> ljones@utkvx3.utk.edu (Leslie Lamont Jones) writes:
-
- >Lion and African Hunting Dog take Zebras regularly, Hyenas and Leopards do
- >so at least occasionally.
-
- >>Then again, the stripes could be camouflage, as Crystal suggested.
-
- >Not to my eye.
-
- Actually they are effective as camouflage, even to your eye -- you just
- haven't tested the matter. The basis of the effect is the breaking up
- of the outline into irregular patterns. Gould goes into the whole question
- in one of his essays.
- --
- Richard Harter: SMDS Inc. Net address: rh@smds.com Phone: 508-369-7398
- US Mail: SMDS Inc., PO Box 555, Concord MA 01742. Fax: 508-369-8272
- In the fields of Hell where the grass grows high
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