Om Prakash Patidar
Senior Teacher of Biology
Many animals have evolved to exhibit some form of camouflage, which is an adaptation that allows animals to blend in with certain aspects of their environment. Camouflage increases an organism's chance of survival by hiding it from predators. This gives the animal a higher probability of being able to successfully reproduce and carry on the species. Camouflage is also used by some predators as a tool for hunting. For them, being able to blend in with their environment gives them an element of surprise and increases their chance of successfully obtaining food.
If you ever go to an outdoors or hunting store, you will see clear evidence that camouflage works. As a group, hunters spend millions of dollars each year buying camouflage to help them blend in with the environment. This is one example of a tool that nature perfected and humans also use to their benefit.
One animal that uses camouflage to hide in its surroundings is the stone flounder, a flat fish that lays on the ocean floor as it searches for prey. It is advantageous for these fish to blend in with the gravel or sand found at the bottom of the sea to avoid predators. This camouflage also hides them from prey that may move close enough for them to catch.
On the vast savannas of Africa, leopards use their coloration and spots as a hunting tool, because it enables them to blend in easily with the tall grasses as they stalk their prey.