What color is the \typica\ version of the moths?

Peppered Moth

Natural Selection

Dr. Kettlewell

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Life Cycle | Predators

Peppered moths are common insects living in England, Europe, and North America. They are small moths, only 1.5 to 2.5 inches across. Their light wings are “peppered” with small dark spots.

Life Cycle

What color is the typica version of the moths?

Light and dark peppered moth larvae. Image by Rockpocket via Wikimedia Commons.

Peppered moth eggs hatch during mid summer. Larvae (caterpillars) feed on the leaves of birch, willow, and oak trees. The larvae look much like a small branch. Having a body that looks like a stick helps the larvae hide from predators. The larvae can even adjust their color from brown to green to best match the branches they are feeding on.

Cold weather is difficult for insects. To avoid death, peppered moth larvae change into pupae (cocoons) for the winter. In April and May the pupae open to reveal a new adult moth. These adults will lay eggs and die by the end of summer. No peppered moth lives for more than one year.

What color is the typica version of the moths?

Peppered moth pupae

While the typical peppered moth is light, and is given the name typica, some moths have dark, almost black, bodies. These moths are given the name carbonaria. Others are somewhere in the middle and have many more dark spots than the light peppered moth. This middle color (or morph) is called insularia. In the past, darker moths were very rare. But that changed around 150 years ago. Continue onto the next section about natural selection to find out why.

Predators

What color is the typica version of the moths?

Light and dark peppered moth. Image by Martinowksy via Wikimedia Commons.

Predators of the peppered moth include flycatchers, nuthatches, and the European robin. Like most moths, peppered moths avoids predators that hunt in daylight by flying at night and resting during the day. Any animal sitting still is harder to see than a moving one.

Peppered moths have extra camouflage to help them hide. The trees they live in have light-colored bark and are covered with small lichens, organisms that are part fungus and part algae or bacteria. The pattern on peppered moth wings looks very similar to lichens.

Peppered Moth

Natural Selection

Dr. Kettlewell

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Written by: Ronald Rutowski and Sean Hannam
Illustrated by: Sabine Deviche

Blending In

You walk over the tan-colored sand of the empty desert. You are mid-stride through a set when a rattlesnake appears out of the sand in front of you, rattling its tail. Luckily it had warned you of its presence. This snake matched its environment almost perfectly, making it very hard to see.

What color is the typica version of the moths?

Camouflage is an appearance or behavior that helps something blend in with the surrounding environment. Click for more detail.

The ability for animals to blend in is what helps many avoid being eaten by predators. For others, it is what helps them catch unsuspecting prey. 

Imagine if that same snake were moved to a green leafy rainforest. The colors that helped the snake blend into the desert will make it stand out against the green environment. It will no longer be camouflaged.

This just goes to show you that camouflage doesn’t work everywhere. What helps you hide in one place might make you stand out in others. So what happens when an animal's environment changes? Let’s take a look at one animal species that is famous for changing over time to stay camouflaged: the peppered moth.

A Pick of Pepper

What color is the typica version of the moths?

The caterpillar of the peppered moth can blend in on some trees, looking like a twig. Click for more detail.

Like many insects, the peppered moth can benefit from blending into its environment. This means its coloration should match with the trees on which it perches. So, what would happen if the trees began changing, and the peppered moths were no longer able to blend in?

It could adapt to these changes in a number of ways. The individuals could move (to try to find trees that match its color). Or the species could have altered behavior, or even change over time to adapt to the new surroundings.

This species has two different adult forms. One form of the species, typica, is a pale lighter color that is peppered with black speckles. The other form, carbonaria, is a much darker color that is peppered with light speckles.

From Light to Dark Moths

Moth collectors in England noted that most peppered moths collected in the early 1800’s were light gray peppered with bits of black. Many years later most of the moths collected were almost completely black.

What color is the typica version of the moths?

Most of the peppered moths collected in the early 1800s were the light form. Click for more detail.

What could have caused the more common light colored moth to become rare?

Scientists bred the moths and figured out that the light-colored form of the peppered moth has different genes from the dark form. The black color of the dark form was due to a mutation in the DNA of the light-colored form. 

Once this mutation was present, the dark-colored moths would produce offspring with dark-colored wings. Light colored adults that didn't have the mutation produced light offspring. But genetics is only part of the story.

A Changing World

During the 1800’s, Europe and America experienced the Industrial Revolution. It was a time of change in manufacturing processes that led to the building of factories.This enabled humans to make many more things much faster.

In the 1800s, manufacturing processes changed. Click for more detail.

We went from a largely rural society to a city or urban one. One of the new fuel sources that was heavily used during this time period was coal. Small amounts of coal can produce large amounts of heat. It nearly replaced wood in many homes in Europe during this time. It was used for heating homes and cooking and it became the main energy source in factories.  

Coal burning released large amounts of smoke and smog into the surrounding environment.This left a layer of black soot on the once lighter-colored trees. The pollution also killed the light speckled colored lichens that grew on the tree trunks. The tree bark was now exposed and dark without the lichens. How did this affect the peppered moth?

The Pepper in Peppered Moth

Like many moths in forests, the peppered moth tends to rest (or "perch") on tree trunks during the day. They do most of their flying at night. So it would probably be a good thing if the moths look similar to the trees that they perch on, right? Then they can be camouflaged from birds that want to eat them. 

Before the Industrial Revolution, the light peppered moth was common, while the dark form was very rare. The light moths blended in with the light-colored trees. However, the Industrial Revolution changed the tree colors.

What color is the typica version of the moths?

After the pollution from the Industrial Revolution started affecting trees, most of the collected peppered moths were of the dark form. Click for more detail.

As the trees darkened with soot, the light-colored moths were easier to see. They were eaten by birds more and more, while the rare dark colored moths blended in better on the darker trees. This made the dark colored moths have a higher survival rate. They lived longer and passed their dark colored genes onto their offspring or young. 

Natural Selection in Action

Over time, the dark colored moths became the more common of the two color forms. Natural selection favored the dark individuals, so they were more successful after the trees changed.

Sound a little hard to believe? Well, more observations have come about since these conditions started to reverse, starting in the 1950s. Then, a Clean Air Act was introduced. Since that time, technology and cleaner burning fuels have started to decrease pollution in the areas where the peppered moth lives.  The lichen has started to grow again and the black soot no longer settles on the barks of the trees. As expected, the light peppered moth population has recently been more common in the population. This is because it is better camouflaged.

Changing Colors

What color is the typica version of the moths?

Dr. Kettlewell wanted to know if natural selection was driving the change in moths. Click to visit the game page and learn more.

Biologists are curious about why coloration can differ among individuals in a species. Many scientists want to look at both how and why a species may change over time.

Scientists like Dr. Henry Bernard Davis Kettlewell used the Scientific Method to test how and why peppered moth coloration changed.

Visit Picking Off the Peppered Moth to learn more.

Need the old version? Click for the Flash version of the Peppered Moth game. 


Images via Wikimedia Commons. Camouflaged spider by Matthias M.

What color is the Carbonaria version of the moths?

In addition to the typical coloration, there is also a natural genetic mutation in peppered moths that causes them to be almost entirely black in color. This variation is known as carbonaria, or the melanic variation.

What color is it typica version of the moss?

One form of the species, typica, is a pale lighter color that is peppered with black speckles.

What are the 3 colors of peppered moths?

Peppered Moth Species, Types, and Scientific name The Peppered Moth may be found in three different colors, pale grey, dark black color, and black with white spots coloration.

Would the moth colors have changed?

The evolution of the peppered moth is an evolutionary instance of directional colour change in the moth population as a consequence of air pollution during the Industrial Revolution. The frequency of dark-coloured moths increased at that time, an example of industrial melanism.