So, I am one that believes in evolution and all that jazz that comes with it, and I have a pretty good understanding of how it works. Individuals of a species with certain traits are better suited for certain things, they are more likely to survive and reproduce, and this causes evolution after a very very long time. It's actually a fairly simple concept.
BUT, one thing always catches me. Creatures that evolve to look like, imitate, or disguise themselves as other creatures or things for the sole purpose of deceiving another creature.
There are plenty I've thought about before this, but what finally made me decide to post this was this Cracked article:
http://www.cracked.com/article_1874...Science&wa_user3=article&wa_user4=recommended
Spiders that look like ants, spiders that look like ants with mandibles that look like a second ant, mussels with perfect fish-replica egg sacs, caterpillars that morph into fucking snakes, spiders that look like bird crap, etc.
There are plenty more I've encountered in the real world and read about elsewhere, and I just can't fathom it. It's easy to understand that a creature would evolve to be able to puff itself up or look bigger, but to perfectly emulate a snake head? With a tongue? Or to look like TWO ants but be a spider?
Some creatures can even look like it was an accident-- for example, I was out scuba-diving once and went to pick up a shell. It darted and swam away from me, because it was a flat fish, buried in the sand, that looked exactly like a seashell. I already thought that was impressive, but you can see where a fish could "happen" to evolve with those colors and that shape and it "happens" to live longer as a result, because it's hidden.
BUT IT'S NOT EMULATING A SNAKE. It doesn't retract its head into its body, bulging the sides of its specifically shaped neck with PERFECT snake decorations on it to make a perfectly-shaped snake head.
Basically, things that evolve in a way that seem to specifically deceive creatures in a certain way based off of "outside" sources, rather than just evolving to "blend in" which is an easily understandable trait evolution.
Discuss?