Chattanooga Times Free Press

‘Amazon Adventure 3D’ arrives at Imax

Film takes viewers to rain forest, shows nature’s clever mimicry

- STAFF REPORT

Naturalist and explorer Henry Walter Bates braved perilous storms and contracted diseases that left him on death’s door as he doggedly investigat­ed the astonishin­g ways in which animals of the Amazon blend into their environmen­t and protect themselves from predators.

When the Tennessee Aquarium Imax 3D Theater opens “Amazon Adventure 3D” on Friday, May 26, viewers will walk in the footsteps of Bates, follow clues and see amazing creatures they ordinarily would never encounter.

Filmed on location in the lush Amazon region, “Amazon Adventure 3D” is a detective story filled with dramatic wildlife footage. Insects and fish that look like leaves, lizards that look like vines, and even birds that appear to be dead branches are revealed upon closer inspection.

The conclusion­s Bates arrived at during his 11-year expedition in the rain forest had a profound impact on the scientific world. His study of the subtle difference­s in the patterning

of longwing butterflie­s is a focal point of “Amazon Adventure.” The discoverie­s he brought back with him to England provided what Charles Darwin deemed “beautiful proof” for the theory of natural selection. To this day, vulnerable species that take on the appearance of noxious or otherwise dangerous animals is called “Batesian

mimicry” in his honor.

“The stories behind Bates’ expedition are thrilling,” says Dr. Anna George, the Aquarium’s vice president of conservati­on science and education. “If you have a curious nature or exploring spirit, you’re going to really enjoy seeing how science is an exhilarati­ng living process.”

After watching “Amazon

Adventure 3D,” guests can visit the Ocean Journey building to see longwing butterfly species in the Butterfly Garden.

“We have lots of longwing butterflie­s in our garden, and they all mimic each other, so they’re hard to identify,” says Jennifer Taylor, the Aquarium’s entomologi­st. “Some of the longwings will have 140 different color variations, and then there’s another longwing species that mimics all of those variations as well. I have a detailed book that helps me determine which species I’m seeing. They’re a very complicate­d group of butterflie­s.”

 ??  ?? A brown-throated sloth reaches for tree vines.
A brown-throated sloth reaches for tree vines.

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