Huffington Post
Hypotheses have included
mating rituals, protection from predators, camouflage and heat protection,
though no evidence has backed up the claims. But in a paper released Tuesday in
Nature Communications, researchers at University of California, Davis may have
proven the reason: to protect the animal from disease-carrying biting flies.
“No one knew why zebras
have such striking coloration,” wrote Tim Caro, lead author and a UC Davis
professor of wildlife biology, in a press release.
The biting fly explanation
has long been suspected, as flies tend to avoid black-and-white striped
surfaces. To find out once and for all, researchers noted the geographic
distribution of zebras, horses and asses, and noted differences in zebra stripe
patterns. They then overlapped the data with variables such as temperature,
terrain, predator range and biting fly distribution.
While the other factors did
not correlate with stripe patterns, one factor overwhelmingly did: the biting
flies.
“I was amazed by our
results,” wrote Caro. “Again and again, there was greater striping on areas of
the body in those parts of the world where there was more annoyance from biting
flies.”
Researchers noted that the
short coats of zebras make them particularly susceptible to the flies, which
may explain why the stripes do not appear on other animals.
However, as researchers
mentioned in the release, one mystery solved leads to yet another mystery: why
biting flies avoid black-and-white striped surfaces.
And the wonder continues...
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