It has recently been remarked that the phnomenon of mimicry extends to the biologists that study Heliconius. It remains unclear whether this convergence at a phenotypic level involves a common genetic basis. Here are a few examples.
Patricio Salazar, who works on hybrid zones and hybridisation and Arnaud Martin, who works with the evolutionary developmental biology of wing patterns.
Robert Reed, Professor at Cornell working on many aspects of Heliconius biology, and Richard Wallbank, recently recruited to butterflies from the world of the fruit fly.
And finally, Keith Willmott, author of upcoming Butterflies of Ecuador, and Andrew Nield, author of the Butterflies of Venezuela.
Suggestions for any more instances of this phenomenon would be gratefully accepted.
There also seems to be some mimicry of names occurring, perhaps best exemplified by Simon Martin who is mimetic in both first and last names. Perhaps the Heliconius community has just got large enough that these things are expected by chance, someone should do a statistical analysis…
Nicola Nadeau, Nicola Chamberlain. Richard Merrill, Richard Wallbank. Chris Jiggins, Kris Kozak, (and Chris Stafford!). Jamie Walters, James Lewis, James Mallet. And I remember this discussion in Gamboa last year, several Heliconius biologists and/or assistants have a twin brother or sister! Mimicry of all sorts :o)
I found this page after typing “Heliconius elevatus” in Google Image. Doh!