Deep in the steamy rainforests, where every leaf hides a predator or prey, survival often depends on effective camouflage and blending in perfectly.
Imagine an insect popping up in hot pink amid endless green, sounds like a snack on legs, for predators!
But the show flips when this bright bug actually does a slow-motion makeover, changing shades to match its leafy surroundings, leaving scientists scratching their heads in amazement. Tropical forests pack a wild mix of colours, from fresh pink sprouts to mature greens, and animals have evolved wild ways to play camouflage queen to hide from predators.

Pink Kaydid (Photo: Canva)
Meet the colour-changing queen who changes from bright pink to green magically
Scientists spotted a vivid pink adult female Arota festae katydid under lights on Barro Colorado Island, Panama, standing out against its usual light green in a leaf-like form, according to Earth.com. This Neotropical bush cricket lives in Panama, Colombia, and Suriname rainforests.
Over a period of a couple of days, kept in a cage with local plants, the 27mm, 1g insect faded from hot pink to pastel by day 4, turning fully green by day 11.
Lead author Dr. Benito Wainwright of the University of St. Andrews said in the Ecology study, “Finding this individual was a genuine surprise. Because it was so rare, we kept it in natural conditions and found it changing color from hot pink to green.”
He added, “Rather than a bizarre genetic quirk, this may actually be a finely tuned survival strategy that tracks the life cycle of the rainforest leaves this insect is trying to resemble.”
Unlike chameleons' instant flips, this gradual pigment change likely helps in camouflage, per PMC study.
It copies leaf-like appearances
Pink matches "delayed greening" in over one-third of island plants, where young leaves start red/pink before greening. The katydid eats pink-leaved Inga, blending with abundant flushes. Co-author Dr. Matt Greenwell of the University of Reading said, “Tropical forests are extraordinarily complex environments, and this discovery hints at just how precisely some animals have evolved to exploit them.”
“You would think that a bright pink insect in a mostly green forest would stand out to predators like a worker in a high-vis jacket,” he further said.

Green Kaydid (Photo: Canva)
“The idea that an insect might gradually shift colour to keep pace with the leaves it mimics shows how dynamic the rainforest can be, and is a remarkable example of camouflage in action,” he added.
It has a survival edge
Past observation pinned pink on rare erythrism mutations, now it's an adaptive polymorphism. Another form is similar to the appearance of dying leaves. Sci. News confirms the pink phase as "nature's perfect camouflage."
This evolving disguise lets Arota festae dodge predators amid patchy forest colours.