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How Zebra Stripes Disrupt Flies’ Flight Patterns

A ‘Costume Change’ for Zebras and Horses Reveals How Stripes Thwart Horsefly Landings

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Two people with horse in zebra-striped blanket in Britain.
Joren Bruggink of Aeres University of Applied Sciences, at left, and Jai Lake of the University of Bristol investigate how horseflies behave around horses wearing different colored coats. This was part of an experiment led by °ϲĻϢ Davis, focused on why zebra stripes are so good at warding off biting flies. (Tim Caro/°ϲĻϢ Davis)

Scientists learned in recent years why zebras have black and white stripes — to avoid biting flies. But today in the journal PLOS ONE probes the question further: What is it about stripes that actually disrupts a biting fly’s ability to land on a zebra and suck its blood?  

University of California, Davis, Professor and Martin How of the University of Bristol led a series of new experiments to better understand how stripes manipulate the behavior of biting flies as they attempt to come in to land on zebras.

Taking place on a horse farm in Great Britain that kept both zebras and horses, the experiments entailed: 

  • Close-up observation of zebras as flies attempted to land on them
  • Detailed videos to record flight trajectories as the flies cruised close to the zebras
  • Dressing the horses and zebras sequentially in black, white and then black-and-white striped coats.

Stripes make lousy landing strips

In the study, flies were just as attracted to zebras as they were to horses, indicating that stripes do not deter flies at a distance.

“Once they get close to the zebras, however, they tend to fly past or bump into them,” said Caro, a professor in the °ϲĻϢ Davis Department of Wildlife, Fish and Conservation Biology. “This indicates that stripes may disrupt the flies’ abilities to have a controlled landing.”

Compared to rates at which flies landed on the white and the black coats, hardly any landed on the striped coats.

“Stripes may dazzle flies in some way once they are close enough to see them with their low-resolution eyes,” said How.

Biologist observes zebra in Britain
°ϲĻϢ Davis wildlife biologist Tim Caro observes zebra behavior in response to biting fly annoyance. (Joren Bruggink/Aeres University of Applied Sciences)

Zebras swish and run, horses twitch  

The study also noted that zebras and horses respond very differently to the presence of flies. Zebras swish their tails almost continuously during the day to keep flies off; they stop feeding if bothered by them; and if the flies are particularly persistent, the zebras will run from them. Horses, on the other hand, primarily twitch and occasionally swish to ward off flies. As a result, any flies that actually contacted zebras were soon dislodged compared to horses.

 

Researchers do not yet understand why zebras evolved these sophisticated defense mechanisms. A possible explanation is zebras may be highly prone to infectious diseases carried by African biting flies, although that hypothesis requires further study. 

The study’s co-authors include Yvette Argueta from °ϲĻϢ Davis; Emmanuelle Sophie Briolat, Maurice Kasprowsky, Matthew Mitchell and Sarah Richardson of the University of Exeter; Joren Bruggink of the Netherlands’ Aeres University of Applied Sciences; and Jai Lake from the University of Bristol.

Media Resources

Tim Caro, °ϲĻϢ Davis Wildlife, Fish and Conservation Biology, 530-771-7116, tmcaro@ucdavis.edu

Kat Kerlin, °ϲĻϢ Davis News and Media Relations, 530-750-9195, kekerlin@ucdavis.edu

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Environment Human & Animal Health

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