“…In contrast, the dry season form generally lack these eyespots, and they rely mainly on crypsis when at rest on dead leaf litter for survival against predators hunting by sight (Lyytinen et al, 2003(Lyytinen et al, , 2004Prudic et al, 2015). Along with the wing pattern changes, both forms differ in a suite of other morphological, behavioural, physiological and life-history traits, as an integrated response which is linked by a common hormonal switch as has been extensively explored in laboratory settings in a single species Bicyclus anynana (Oostra et al, 2010(Oostra et al, , 2014van Bergen & Beldade, 2019;van Bergen et al, 2017). Such an integrated system helps to maintain a season-specific adaptive phenotype by making use of environmental cues to predict approaching seasonal shifts (Brakefield & Reitsma, 1991;Kooi & Brakefield, 1999).…”