In Disguise
There are many who claim that during the Cold War, the Soviet Union placed "sleeper agents" among U.S. citizens that were able to blend in and appear completely non-threatening to the general population and who were unidentifiable by government agencies. Their role was to blend in, hidden, until needed for some type of covert, or overt action against the country. They quietly lived what appeared to be a normal life until or unless, activated.
It was the ultimate disguise. Your best friend might be a foreign agent, and you would never know it.
Some might claim the same is happening today although the powers behind such actions are different. Your next-door neighbor might not be as benign as they appear.
I have no desire to stir up fear, merely to create an illustration of behavior that was developed by mimicking behaviors that are common in nature. The cuckoo lays its eggs in the nests of other birds, so it doesn't have to rear the young. Other behaviors are more overtly parasitic in nature where one species lives directly off of another.
Dasymutilla bioculata, in the photograph below, is commonly known as a Velvet Ant. This one was passing near our fire pit the other night and I was able to take the picture. Velvet Ants are actually a parasitic wasp. Notice that its coloration is similar to some of the paper wasps which are common here. They lay their eggs inside the cocoons of other wasps. Upon hatching they frequently kill their hosts. Their stings are extremely painful.

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