It is also easy to see how a bobcat might approach a skunk, have a negative experience, and learn from it. In fact, I can find innumerable examples of how warningly colored animals teach predators a lesson they will not likely forget.
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In The Birder’s Bug Book, Waldbauer speculates that it is possible that the coral snake actually mimics some other, less venomous snake. He supposes that the coyote encounters the other red, yellow, and black snake, and is assaulted with some mild venom. By the time he sees a coral snake, he knows to avoid the aposematic colors.
That’s a thought.
But what is that other snake? This snake would have to be nearly every place the coral snake is…from North Carolina to Argentina. There are 52 kinds of snakes in Louisiana. There are 5 venomous snakes besides the coral snake: pygmy rattlesnake, copperhead, cottonmouth, timber rattlesnake, and eastern diamond-backed rattlesnake. None of these contestants could win a coral snake look-alike contest.
So here’s what I think: Snake-eaters don’t learn to avoid red, black, and yellow rings. They are born with the instinct to avoid those colors. Add this behavior to hundreds of others that we already accept as instinctual (from how sea turtles get back to the same beaches where they started their lives to lay their eggs, to how my dog always makes three circles before lying down), and doesn’t it just make sense?
http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0003-0031(198004)103%3A2%3C346%3ARONTBT%3E2.0.CO%3B2-I
http://www.amazon.com/Birders-Bug-Book-Gilbert-Waldbauer/dp/0674002067