penguins camouflage
camouflage or mimicry
Elephants do not use camouflage mimicry as a survival strategy. Their large size and social behaviors serve as their primary defense mechanisms against predators.
Mimicry is the similarity of one species to another that can protect one or both of them from predators. Some examples of mimicry are bugs that camouflage themselves to look like leaves or bugs that look like sticks.
No, emperor penguins do not have camouflage. Their black and white coloration actually helps them blend in with the surrounding sea ice, providing them with some level of camouflage from predators while hunting for food in the ocean.
Examples of morphological adaptations that help organisms blend into their surroundings include camouflage coloration, such as the ability to change skin color or patterns to match the environment, mimicry to look like another species or object, and body shapes that mimic the texture or shape of the surroundings to avoid detection by predators or prey. These adaptations help organisms to conceal themselves and increase their chances of survival.
dolphins use mimicry not camoflauge
mimicry
no
mimicry
mimicry
Camouflage involves blending in with the environment to avoid detection by predators or prey. Mimicry is when an organism imitates another organism's appearance, behavior, or sound to deceive predators or prey. Mimicry can involve mimicking a harmful species (Batesian mimicry) or mimicking a harmful species in an area where the mimicker is dominant (Müllerian mimicry).
camouflage or mimicry
adaptation
mimicry,camouflage,nocturnal
Elephants do not use camouflage mimicry as a survival strategy. Their large size and social behaviors serve as their primary defense mechanisms against predators.
Peppered moths have Camouflage and Mimicry, the use of Camouflage is to hide from predators.
they both make it so where their predator will not harm them