@article{oai:ir.soken.ac.jp:00004019, author = {越髙, 久晴 and KOSHITAKA, Hisaharu and ARIKAWA, Kentaro and KINOSHITA, Michiyo}, issue = {11}, journal = {Journal of Comparative Physiology A, Journal of Comparative Physiology A}, month = {Nov}, note = {Papilio butterflies use a tetrachromatic color vision to discriminate a rewarding flower, approach, land and take nectar from the flower. In the course of further analyzing their foraging behavior in a laboratory condition, we found that some butterflies could not land on the target flower even they discriminated and tried to land on it, especially when the target was dark. This phenomenon, which we call “landing suppression”, indicates that the cue for landing differs from the cue for visually locating a flower. We hypothesized that a possible cue for landing was intensity contrast between the target and background, and have initiated to test this hypothesis. We tested the butterflies’ landing behavior to targets of various colors and intensities presented on background of black or various densities of gray. As a result, the landing was most strongly suppressed when the intensity contrast was close to zero irrespective of the target colors, suggesting that the butterflies used the target-background intensity contrast when landing.}, pages = {1105--1112}, title = {Intensity contrast as a crucial cue for butterfly landing}, volume = {197}, year = {2011} }